TheOfficialACM OP t1_itreban wrote
Reply to comment by NoIHaveNotRedditYet in I am the co-author behind ACM’s TechBrief on Election Security: Risk-limiting Audits. Ask me anything about election security! by TheOfficialACM
The earlier generation of paperless electronic voting systems, adopted in the early 2000's, have been widely studied and have been found to have significant security flaws (examples: California "top to bottom" review in 2007, Ohio EVEREST 2007). (I was one of the co-authors on the California review.)
As a consequence, all the new voting machines involve paper in one form or another. The two most popular forms are ballot marking devices, which have some sort of computer interface and produce a printed ballot, and hand-marked paper ballots, which are typically scanned by a computer, often bolted to the top of the ballot box ("precinct count optical scanner").
The magic of a risk limiting audit (the topic of this thread!) is that it provides an efficient process where a post-election audit can prove, to a desired level of statistical confidence, that any errors in the electronic tabulation are small enough that they don't change the announced winner of a contest.
So, RLAs let us have the efficiency benefits of computers, while still having the security properties that we want from hand tallies, without requiring the slow (and error-prone) process of hand counting.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments