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    La nuova BBS è in fase Alpha. I post precedenti al 22 luglio 2024 potrebbero non essere trasferibili, ma rimarranno disponibili per la lettura su /old/.

    I've had at least two journalists (from reputable places) ask me about hacking papal elections and/or how we can apply the security for electing popes to US elections.

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    • mattblaze@federate.socialM Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
      mattblaze@federate.social
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      I've had at least two journalists (from reputable places) ask me about hacking papal elections and/or how we can apply the security for electing popes to US elections.

      Just no.

      bluedot@left-tusk.comB 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
      • bluedot@left-tusk.comB Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
        bluedot@left-tusk.com @mattblaze@federate.social
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        @mattblaze

        The papal election is surprisingly secure, and I imagine we could take some lessons from it.

        For example, the people who count the votes are selected at random, so it's almost impossible to bribe the vote counters.

        https://www.schneier.com/essays/archives/2013/02/how_secure_is_the_pa.html

        mattblaze@federate.socialM 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
        • mattblaze@federate.socialM Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
          mattblaze@federate.social @bluedot@left-tusk.com
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          @BlueDot This is just stupid.

          There are fewer than 200 people voting, they all know each other, and they're locked in a room together

          bluedot@left-tusk.comB 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
          • bluedot@left-tusk.comB Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
            bluedot@left-tusk.com @mattblaze@federate.social
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            @mattblaze

            "Stupid" is a bit harsh.

            Obviously we can't lock all American voters into a room while we count their votes, and that's not the lesson I suggest drawing from the Schneier piece.

            Paper ballots are a Good Thing, because they can be recounted by hand. That could be part of a minimal standard for fair elections.

            bluedot@left-tusk.comB 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
            • bluedot@left-tusk.comB Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
              bluedot@left-tusk.com @bluedot@left-tusk.com
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              @mattblaze

              Doing an election canvas at scale does require expertise, and machine counts, but some hand counting of a subset of the ballots (to validate the machine count) should be a part of every election. And selecting people at random for that low-skill task wouldn't be a bad thing. It would create a group of ordinary citizens who've seen with their own eyes that the count was fair, which could help counter the anti-democracy propaganda.

              whybird@aus.socialW 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
              • whybird@aus.socialW Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
                whybird@aus.social @bluedot@left-tusk.com
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                @BlueDot @mattblaze I’d like to slightly challenge your assumption that machine counting is required. Australia counts about 17 million votes each election - all on paper and by hand - and there is nothing in the system that wouldn’t scale to ten or twenty times that size, which would be required for a near 100% turnout in the USA, given more people to do it (which you have, by definition.)

                (One thing that is required that the USA does NOT have is a properly funded, widely trusted, entirely politically independent body that runs elections, like the Australian AEC.)

                mattblaze@federate.socialM 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
                • mattblaze@federate.socialM Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
                  mattblaze@federate.social @whybird@aus.social
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                  @whybird @BlueDot Here's a sample ballot and voter information pamphlet from San Francisco from 2020. It's 233 pages long, and lists all the ballot questions. There are 38 questions (making this a small ballot for California), using four different voting methods (vote for one, vote for k out of n, ranked choice, and yes/no).

                  Good luck tallying that without a machine.

                  https://sfelections.sfgov.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Voting/N20_VIP_EN.pdf

                  quinn@social.circl.luQ 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
                  • quinn@social.circl.luQ Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
                    quinn@social.circl.lu @mattblaze@federate.social
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                    @mattblaze @whybird @BlueDot I like to use California ballots to jump scare Europeans. Never fails.

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