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United States Security The Internet Politics

West Virginia Poised To Allow Smartphone Voting For Disabled Voters (arstechnica.com) 47

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: West Virginia's legislature last week passed legislation allowing disabled voters to cast votes by smartphone, sending the bill to the desk of Governor Jim Justice. Justice is expected to sign the legislation, according to NBC. It's a decision that alarms many computer security experts, who say that the Internet and smartphones are too vulnerable to hackers.

The legislation would require every county in the state to offer smartphone voting. It doesn't specify any particular voting method, but the state has recently been experimenting with software called Voatz that tries to use a blockchain to help secure elections. West Virginia performed a small-scale pilot project with Voatz in the 2018 election, allowing about 150 overseas voters to vote using the technology. A fundamental problem with online voting, experts say, is that modern computing devices have a huge "attack surface." Even if the voting app itself is completely secure, there might still be vulnerabilities in the user's operating system, network, or the servers used to register users and collect votes. And to swing an election, a hacker doesn't need to change anyone's votes -- just preventing some of a candidate's voters from voting can be sufficient to swing a close election. But West Virginia officials have pressed forward, arguing that it's too difficult for some disabled voters to get to a physical polling place to cast votes.
Washington is also considering smartphone voting. The King Conservation District, a district of 1.2 million voters encompassing Greater Seattle, may have the option to cast votes online using a smartphone.
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West Virginia Poised To Allow Smartphone Voting For Disabled Voters

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  • by Exsam ( 768226 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @06:56PM (#59687244)

    But West Virginia officials have pressed forward, arguing that it's too difficult for some disabled voters to get to a physical polling place to cast votes.

    Umm...because absentee ballots aren't a thing? This argument is pure BS.

  • Does that include mentally disabled? Actually, I thought the use of the term "disabled" went out like 10 years ago. The headline strikes me as being offensive.

    • Does that include mentally disabled?

      I'm afraid not. You and I and the coal miners who think their jobs are coming back would still have to show up to vote in person.

    • by tsqr ( 808554 )

      Are you personally offended, or is the problem that you worry that others might be offended?

      The article [wikipedia.org], "List of disability-related terms with negative connotations" propounds that "There is a great deal of disagreement as to what should be considered offensive. Views vary with geography and culture, over time, and among individuals. Many terms that some people view as offensive are not viewed as offensive by others, and even where some people are offended by certain terms, others may be offended by the re

      • I'm personally offended. I also worry it might offend others. I'm pretty sure the proper term is "differently abled", not "disabled". We might need to cancel this website. #cancelculture

        • by tsqr ( 808554 )

          George Carlin had a few things to say [youtube.com] about "soft language".

          "Differently abled" is not a "proper term"; it's gobbledegook designed to allow people to hide from the truth. Frankly, as a mildly disabled person myself, I find it offensive --I don't need or want padding installed on the sharp corners of language to make me feel better about myself. Fortunately, I don't have an inherent right to not be offended, and neither do you.

  • Excellent! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @07:05PM (#59687292) Homepage Journal
    This will make it easier for my friend Yuri, and his brother, Boris to vote in election! These are fine West Virginian name, in no way associated with Vladimir Putin!
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Hell, half the people who vote every year in WVa are dead - after all, if the state knew they were dead, the disability checks would stop coming, and that's WVa's economic engine!

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @07:44PM (#59687424)

    I, as a non-US citizen but someone with a deep security background, am very interested in US politics and always wanted to have a say who gets elected there!

  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @07:47PM (#59687432)
    According to the first website I found (https://247wallst.com/special-report/2017/07/29/states-with-the-most-americans-on-disability-3/), West Virginia has more "disabled" people per capita in the entire US by a long shot. In 2016, 9% of their population was "disabled". Perhaps this very poorly thought out test should be tried somewhere where such a huge percentage of the population isn't "disabled".
  • Young people will not queue in lines to vote when they can do their groceries or find a date in a mobile app. As for security, an average person would be more upset if hackers steal their dick/boob pic than their vote. So we anyway need very strong security and legal protection for digital data for people to live their daily lives in peace.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      It's not going to happen in any liberal society, for the same reason why voting happens in controlled environment where voter is not allowed to have any trace of their vote.

      Vote buying and voter coercion. Both require for the buyer/coercer to have access to the voter at the moment of the vote. Voting booths prevent it.

      Smartphones do not.

      Illiberal societies on the other hand will most certainly incorporate this feature ASAP, as it makes pressuring voters to vote in a certain way significantly easier.

      • by iamacat ( 583406 )

        How is this the biggest problem? It takes only one whistleblower to send a vote buyer/coercer to a long prison term, maybe by recording them on the same smartphone. On the other hand, voting access and intentional suppression is a huge real life problem that is infeasible to resolve through law enforcement. County can't be expected to spend unlimited funds for physical polling places in sparse rural areas. E-voting insures everyone has access and there is no way to intimidate people into not voting. Liberal

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          >It takes only one whistleblower to send a vote buyer/coercer to a long prison term

          Oh? So we also surrender presumption of innocence and just send people to prison based on just an accusation?

          As for "recording people on phones", have you ever seen how Chinese handle that for things like getting driving licence? It's hilarious. Cheating the digital systems is one of the easiest things in the world for motivated people. On industrial level no less, there are literally organisations in China specifically de

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @11:01PM (#59687784)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ...because if someone's going to buy my vote, I can change it afterwards. This nullifies that tactic.
    Obviously one should not be able to change one's vote after voting close.

  • The biggest problem with online voting (& voting by mail etc) is that it's not a secret ballot.

    Let's say someone is paying you to vote for Party X or is threatening you to vote for Party X, if you vote at the booth, he will never know who you actually voted for.

    OTOH, if you vote online (or by mail), he can stand over your shoulder & make sure who you voted for.

  • There's this thing called the "Secret ballot". We've had it for so long now, I suppose a lot of people have forgotten why it was introduced.
  • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday February 04, 2020 @08:50AM (#59688780)
    Two new candidates have rocketed up the polls in West Virginia. It now looks like voters in West Virginia will now have a choice between Victor Putin (R) and Sam Jinping (D).
  • In all sense of the word, I think not.
  • Online and mobile voting is a terrible idea, because it's vastly less secure than in-person voting.

    When all ballots are cast in person in polling stations, there are poll workers and other voters present, so anyone acting suspicious can be seen and stopped, so the number of attackers is limited by physical location and the duration of the attack is limited by observers. As a result, there are vanishingly few cases of in-person voting fraud, just some misunderstandings, such as the woman arrested because she

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