| > I'm not sure what you are getting at here. A voter can not verify their vote in the current paper systems. In the current paper systems you don't have to, as you know what you put on it before it got anonymized and counted as one vote by the teams watched by teams. > Using these systems they can. In theory, yes. In practice, barely. If it was easy/practical it would be intrinsically susceptible to coercion. In general, I agree with everything you write except for this paragraph: > We are automating voting with voting machines and vote tabulators for good reasons. They are easier to use, particularly for the disabled, they are faster, they are cheaper than redundant teams of people, and they more accurate than manual methods. They are already arrived, and their use will only grow over time. Pleas like yours to "just use paper" are having little effect on their inceasing adoption. The only "good" reason would be cost, but I wouldn't agree that it's a worthy trade-off. They could be easier to use, but it seems generally to be prone to UI issues making it unclear who/what you're voting for. I'm sure their use will grow over time, but it won't be for any reasons that are good for democracy. |
True. But the "secret ballot in a polling booth using paper" systems are disappearing. 32% of Australian votes aren't done that way now.
> In theory, yes. In practice, barely. If it was easy/practical it would be intrinsically susceptible to coercion.
It can be reduced to scanning a QR code in an app. It is a bit of a mystery to me why you think that isn't easy, practical or is susceptible to coercion.