Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

California Republicans File Suit Seeking to Block Newsom Redistricting Plan

4 hours ago

Revised Congressional Maps Target Valadao, Boost Gray in the Valley

5 hours ago

Dollar Slips as Traders Wait on Jackson Hole

6 hours ago

Tesla Drivers Can Pursue Class Action Over Self-Driving Claims, Judge Rules

7 hours ago

Ukraine Offers $100 Billion Weapons Deal to Obtain US Security Guarantees, FT Reports

22 hours ago

‘Friends’ Star Matthew Perry’s Drug Dealer to Plead Guilty in Overdose Death

1 day ago

Trump Eyes Reclassification to Make Cannabis Easier to Buy and Sell

1 day ago

America’s Wildfire Fighters, Unmasked in Toxic Smoke, Are Getting Sick and Dying

1 day ago

US Offers Up to $50,000 Bonus for New ICE Deportation Officers

1 day ago
How Safe Is Your Vote? This Is What Affects Election Integrity.
The-Conversation
By The Conversation
Published 8 years ago on
February 15, 2018

Share

Every vote counts. It’s the key principle underlying democracy. Through the history of democratic elections, people have created many safeguards to ensure votes are cast and counted fairly: paper ballots, curtains around voting booths, locked ballot boxes, supervised counting, provisions for recounting and more.

With the advent of computer technology has come the prospect of faster counting of votes, and even, some hope, more secure and accurate voting. But the internet has also enabled hackers to attack voting systems and has given disinformation campaigns new tools to influence public opinion. Here are highlights of The Conversation’s coverage of these issues.

1. Voting Machines are Old

After the debacle of the 2000 election’s efforts to count votes, the federal government handed out massive amounts of money to the states to buy newer voting equipment that, everyone hoped, would avoid a repeat of the “hanging chad” mess. But almost two decades later, as Lawrence Norden and Christopher Famighetti at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University explain, that one-time cash infusion has left a troubling legacy of aging voting machines:

“Imagine you went to your basement and dusted off the laptop or mobile phone that you used in 2002. What would happen if you tried to turn it on?”

That’s the machinery U.S. democracy depends on.

2. Not Everyone Can Use the Devices

Most voting machines don’t make accommodations for people with physical disabilities that affect how they vote. Juan Gilbert at the University of Florida quantifies the problem:

“In the 2012 presidential election, … The turnout rate for voters with disabilities was 5.7 percent lower than for people without disabilities. If voters with disabilities had voted at the same rate as those without a disability, there would have been three million more voters weighing in on issues of local, state and national significance.”

To date, most efforts to solve the problems have involved using special voting equipment just for people with particular disabilities. That’s expensive and inefficient – and remember, separate is not equal. Gilbert has invented an open-source (read: inexpensive) voting machine system that can be used by people with many different disabilities, as well as people without disabilities.
With the system, which has been tested and approved in several states, voters can cast their ballots using a keyboard, a joystick, physical buttons, a touchscreen or even their voice.

3. Machines Are Not Secure

In part because of their age, nearly every voting machine in use is vulnerable to various sorts of cyberattacks. For years, researchers have documented ways to tamper with vote counts, and yet few machines have had their cyberdefenses upgraded.
The fact that the election system is so widespread – with multiple machines in every municipality nationwide – also makes it weaker, writes Richard Forno at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County: There are simply more opportunities for an attacker to find a way in.

“Voter registration and administration systems operated by state and national governments are at risk too. Hacks here could affect voter rosters and citizen databases. Failing to secure these systems and records could result in fraudulent information in the voter database that may lead to improper (or illegal) voter registrations and potentially the casting of fraudulent votes.”

4. Even Without an Attack, Major Concerns

Even if an attack never happens – or if nobody can prove one happened – public trust in elections is vulnerable to sore losers taking advantage of the fact that cyberweaknesses exist. Just that prospect could destabilize the country, argues Herbert Lin of Stanford University:

“State and local election officials can and should provide for paper backup of voting this (and every) November. But in the end, debunking claims of election rigging, electronically or otherwise, amounts to trying to prove something didn’t happen – it can’t be done.”

5. The Russians Are a Factor

American University historian Eric Lohr explains the centuries of experience Russia has in meddling in other countries’ affairs, but notes that the U.S. isn’t innocent itself:
“In fact, the U.S. has a long record of putting its finger on the scales in elections in other countries.”
Neither country is unique: Countries have attempted to influence each other’s domestic politics throughout history.

6. The Real Problems Aren’t Technological at All

In any case, the major threats to U.S. election integrity have to do with domestic policies governing how voting districts are designed, and who can vote.
Penn State technologist Sascha Meinrath discusses how partisan panels have “systematically drawn voting districts in ways that dilute the power of their opponent’s party,” and “chosen to systematically disenfranchise poor, minority and overwhelmingly Democratic-leaning constituencies.”
There’s plenty of work to be done.
The ConversationEditors’ note: This is an updated version of an article originally published Oct. 18, 2016.
Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Unified Error Skews State Teacher Data, Analysis Shows

DON'T MISS

Gabbard Revokes Security Clearances of 37 Current, Former US Intelligence Members

DON'T MISS

Immigrant Students Shape California’s Future. Don’t Close the Door on Them

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Boardroom Will Now Display ‘In God We Trust’

DON'T MISS

Founders of This New Development Say You Must Be White to Live There

DON'T MISS

Trump Escalates Attacks Against the Smithsonian Institution

DON'T MISS

Yosemite Biologist Who Hung Trans Pride Flag From El Capitan Is Fired

DON'T MISS

Maine Oysterman Launches Bid to Unseat Republican US Senator Susan Collins

DON'T MISS

California Republicans File Suit Seeking to Block Newsom Redistricting Plan

DON'T MISS

California, Other State AGs Urge Trump EPA to Drop Plan to Kill Greenhouse Gas Rules

UP NEXT

Immigrant Students Shape California’s Future. Don’t Close the Door on Them

UP NEXT

Fresno County Boardroom Will Now Display ‘In God We Trust’

UP NEXT

Founders of This New Development Say You Must Be White to Live There

UP NEXT

Trump Escalates Attacks Against the Smithsonian Institution

UP NEXT

Yosemite Biologist Who Hung Trans Pride Flag From El Capitan Is Fired

UP NEXT

Maine Oysterman Launches Bid to Unseat Republican US Senator Susan Collins

UP NEXT

California Republicans File Suit Seeking to Block Newsom Redistricting Plan

UP NEXT

California, Other State AGs Urge Trump EPA to Drop Plan to Kill Greenhouse Gas Rules

UP NEXT

Kings County Sheriff Seeks Public’s Help in Finding at-Risk Missing Man

UP NEXT

Madera County Authorities Seek Help Finding Family of Deceased Man

Fresno County Boardroom Will Now Display ‘In God We Trust’

2 hours ago

Founders of This New Development Say You Must Be White to Live There

3 hours ago

Trump Escalates Attacks Against the Smithsonian Institution

3 hours ago

Yosemite Biologist Who Hung Trans Pride Flag From El Capitan Is Fired

4 hours ago

Maine Oysterman Launches Bid to Unseat Republican US Senator Susan Collins

4 hours ago

California Republicans File Suit Seeking to Block Newsom Redistricting Plan

4 hours ago

California, Other State AGs Urge Trump EPA to Drop Plan to Kill Greenhouse Gas Rules

4 hours ago

Kings County Sheriff Seeks Public’s Help in Finding at-Risk Missing Man

4 hours ago

Madera County Authorities Seek Help Finding Family of Deceased Man

4 hours ago

Revised Congressional Maps Target Valadao, Boost Gray in the Valley

5 hours ago

Fresno Unified Error Skews State Teacher Data, Analysis Shows

This story was originally published by EdSource. Sign up for their daily newsletter. A Fresno Unified School District clerical mistake highl...

1 hour ago

Fresno Unified students in a dual-immersion class
1 hour ago

Fresno Unified Error Skews State Teacher Data, Analysis Shows

Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard looks on during a press briefing, at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 23, 2025. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

Gabbard Revokes Security Clearances of 37 Current, Former US Intelligence Members

Dr. Adam Kaiserman's English class at College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, California
2 hours ago

Immigrant Students Shape California’s Future. Don’t Close the Door on Them

2 hours ago

Fresno County Boardroom Will Now Display ‘In God We Trust’

Image of co-founder of whites only development in Arkansas
3 hours ago

Founders of This New Development Say You Must Be White to Live There

The exterior of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 1, 2025. (Reuters File)
3 hours ago

Trump Escalates Attacks Against the Smithsonian Institution

Fired Yosemite Biologist Who Flew Transgender Flag
4 hours ago

Yosemite Biologist Who Hung Trans Pride Flag From El Capitan Is Fired

U.S. Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) speaks on behalf of one of U.S. President Donald Trump's judicial nominees during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 30, 2025. (Reuters File)
4 hours ago

Maine Oysterman Launches Bid to Unseat Republican US Senator Susan Collins

Search

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Send this to a friend