[EM] proxies and confidentiality
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
abd at lomaxdesign.com
Wed Mar 1 12:04:11 PST 2006
At 02:07 PM 3/1/2006, Jobst Heitzig wrote:
>Dear Abd ul-Rahman!
> >> ... Is this possible without the use of
> >> advanced technology like, say, public key cryptography?
>
>To which you replied:
> > Yes. It's called secret ballot, and it is standard process.
>
>Perhaps I'm dumb, but could you please explain how that works?
>
>Just to be sure, let me state more precisely what I think is a necessary
>degree of secrecy: *Nobody* but me must know whether I voted, what I
>voted, whether I named a proxy, and who the proxy is. I don't see how
>this can be done in an easy way!
All of this is easy and standard in elections. I'm just surprised
that you haven't realized it, there must be some kind of brain
fault.... happens to everyone.
Here is an example of how it is done:
You walk into a room and verify your identity with a clerk. The clerk
hands you a ballot, an envelope, and a pencil. You take this into a
curtained booth, and mark the ballot (or don't mark it), however you
wish, privately. You then put it into the envelope, walk back to the
clerk and hand it in. The clerk, in your presence, puts the ballot
into a locked box. There will often be a police guard to prevent
theft of the box or any attempt to inspect the ballots outside of
official process.
The only flaw in the security is that officials with access to the
list of those who voted will know that you received a ballot. They
will have no idea how you marked it, or, indeed, if you marked it at
all. In some places the list of who voted is public record.
Now, it is theoretically possible to compromise this system, but let
me say that there are many kinds of election fraud in the U.S., but I
have *never* heard of the secrecy of a ballot being compromised.
While it is possible, it would also be difficult and there would be
substantial risks (and it would be highly illegal, so the value of
doing it would have to be great). In the end, with all that effort,
all you have done is figure out how someone voted, and then, to use
this information, you would have to take further and very substantial
risks. For what? To have a significant effect, you would have to do
all this on a large scale, intimidating many people. And that is
*highly* visible, and you would be continually creating motivated enemies.
No, it is much simpler to stuff the ballot boxes, mar the ballots to
invalidate them (which can be done during the counting process in
spite of significant precautions, there are some allegations that it
happened in Florida 2000), interfere with the process in other ways,
including "accidentally" removing from the voter rolls people who are
legally qualified to vote but who demographically are likely to vote
as you don't like. (Again, Florida 2000 and the African-American
vote, with perhaps thousands of illegally disqualified voters. What
are they going to do, appeal? And if they win the appeal, the
election will not be redone. It is actually moot until the next
election. They got away with it.
Piercing the veil of voting secrecy, quite simply, is probably the
most expensive and risky method of fraudulently manipulating
elections. The only aspect of it that can succeed is intimidation
directed against voting itself, which happens in unsettled
jurisdictions like Iraq or Afghanistan. And where absentee ballots
are allowed (as they are in the U.S. and many other places), this too
becomes quite difficult. What are you going to do, watch everybody
every minute of every day? Here, you can obtain absentee ballots
through the mail. Under unsettled conditions, where there is some
possibiity of retaliation for merely registering to vote, I would
imagine that voter rolls themselves would be considered highly secret.
If you are a member of a *highly* rejected group, there might be
enough of society aligned against you to succeed in compromising your
secrecy; but in that case, you would simply be better off voting
since your vote isn't going to accomplish anything anyway. (Unless
there is something like Asset Voting, where every vote *does* count.)
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