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The more likely nightmare voting scenario

Faye Flam

By Faye Flam Bloomberg

Published Nov. 8, 2016

The more likely nightmare voting scenario
Interference by hackers is just one of the nightmare scenarios that worry computer scientists about the upcoming election. The other is a race so close that calling the result is beyond the capacity of today's voting technology.

Experts who've delved into the accuracy of these apparatuses -- from punch cards and mechanical levers to electronic voting machines -- say that no system is perfect. In most cases the error rates are unknown, or are only measured in artificial test settings and not as they would be used in the real world.

Computer scientist Douglas Jones of the University of Iowa, who co-authored the book "Broken Ballots: Will Your Vote Count?," came to realize that voters usually blame themselves when something goes wrong in the voting booth -- a tendency that could mask intentional hacking or equipment error. When Jones set up experiments with electronic voting machines rigged to switch votes away from the subjects' choices, the people casting ballots assumed they had done something wrong. "People tend to trust the machines," he said -- even when the machines don't work.

Electronic voting machines use proprietary software, making it hard for outside researchers to get a measure of their error rates, according to computer scientist Rebecca Mercuri, founder of the company Notable Software and an expert on electronic voting systems. "In polling they say the results are plus or minus 3 points or so, but they don't say that about voting machines," she said. "If it's a really close election, you're looking at a crapshoot."

Voting has surely advanced since the 19th century, when Americans voted by raising their hands in public buildings and swearing on a Bible that they didn't cast more than one ballot. Today's scanners and voting machines ensure privacy and make it possible to count millions of votes. But there was a surge of concern about their reliability after the 2000 presidential race, when candidates Al Gore and George W. Bush were separated by a razor-thin margin of votes.

It all came down to Florida, which was using a common technology of the time, the Votomatic -- a system of punch cards read by machine. Until 2000, people thought the punch-card system was high-tech, said Jones. It was also cheap. But a partial recount in the too-close-to-call race revealed flaws. Some votes hadn't been counted because punches were incomplete -- hence, hanging and pregnant chads.

Shortly after the Supreme Court decided the race, Jones got access to a Votomatic and showed that if it was not properly maintained, the chads tended to accumulate, preventing the mechanism from properly punching the cards. "It leads to a very nice pregnant chad," Jones said.

The chad problem was what scientists would refer to as random error -- noise in the system that limits its capacity to get an exact count. Critics also pointed to what they saw as systematic errors -- problems in the way overseas and absentee ballots were counted that might have skewed things in one direction.

Over the next decade, many states replaced punch-cards with electronic voting machines. The problem there, Jones said, is that "they replaced a system with flaws with one whose weaknesses are unknown."

Manufacturers sometimes subject sample machines to testing, Mercuri said. But that's like sampling just a few cars of each make for safety and emissions inspections rather than requiring all cars go through it. Based on her own investigations, she always takes out an absentee ballot so her vote is recorded on paper, rather than using the electronic machines that are the standard in her state of New Jersey. If there was a glitch that corrupted the data, she said, there would be no way a recount could retrace what voters actually pressed on a touch screen.

And while close calls are rare, they happen. Mercuri testified as an expert witness in a 2008 case in which two candidates for office in Orange County, California -- both named Nguyen -- finished only seven votes apart. She said she inspected some of the ballot forms that were rejected by the machine. Some had stray marks or scribbles. In one case, someone had doodled a flower, she said. A full hand recount would have been the best way to decide the race, but it was never done.

On the bright side, Mercuri and Jones agree it would be difficult for anyone overseas to hack into this election, since voting machines aren't connected to the internet. However, scientists have shown how easy it is to hack into a voting machine from the inside.

Jones warns that if overseas hackers got access to online voter registration lists, they could disrupt the election by changing addresses so people would be turned away -- told they are not registered or are in the wrong precinct. The best hackers, he said, wouldn't leave any evidence behind. He warns voters to be prepared, and not to automatically assume they made a mistake if something goes wrong.

Previously:
08/26/16: The science of salt consumption is quite reassuring
06/27/16: Heredity Is Nobody's Fault. Until Now
06/06/16: Cell Phones and the Anatomy of a Cancer Scare
02/12/16: Too cautious about food? That can be dangerous

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Faye Flam writes about science, mathematics and medicine. She has been a staff writer for Science magazine and a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer. She is author of "The Score: How the Quest for Sex has Shaped the Modern Man."

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