Palm Beach Lost Votes: Paper is not the Problem


Submitted by jsebes on October 10, 2008 - 9:32pm. PST

The dust has settled – sort of – in the “lost ballots snafu” in Palm Beach County Florida, enough that I can correct a very serious mis-reading of the events, and briefly summarize the two completely contradictory “outcomes” of investigation: (1) it’s an accounting problem, not a technology problem, and (2) it’s a technology problem. Either way, the result is a failed election – not just a clouded outcome, but a completely failed election. The very short story: a recount was needed, 3000+ ballots couldn’t be


Denver Goes "Back to Paper" -- Sort Of


Submitted by jsebes on July 16, 2008 - 3:13pm. PST

A news article from Denver notes that the city is reversing its experiment from its last election, and going "back to paper."

It's Back to Paper Ballots, Precincts, For This Year's Elections 

This only sort of true. Yes, it's true that Denver is using a voting method that election officials say they're more comfortable with, and that some voters will likely view as more trustworthy. 


Paper trails, Voter IDs, and election machines


Submitted by jsebes on April 17, 2008 - 4:57pm. PST

I wanted to call attention to another fine article in the "Freedom to Tinker" blog, this one by Dan Wallach.


Syndicate content

Fundamentally improving the way digital voting technology works.

From the Blog

Re-inventing How America Votes -- Now More Relevant Than Ever


In a previous post, I noted two things we've learned from this election. The first (and subject of that

Re-inventing How America Votes -- Now More Relevant Than Ever


In a previous post, I noted two things we've learned from this election. The first (and subject of that