Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) voting machine security has been a significant topic of contention ever since Diebold voting machine code turned up on a public internet site in 2003 and computer scientists at Johns Hopkins University declared the machine “unsuitable for use in a general election.” Since then, many people from computer scientists to politicians have begun to insist that DREs be equipped with a paper trail. A paper trail provides a paper printout for the voter to approve at the end of each voting session. Although there have been strong political efforts to place paper trails on DRE machines, there have not been any scientific studies to indicate that paper trails are effective audits. This work describes a user study done to compare paper trails to audio audits, a new proposal for DRE auditing. Participants in the study completed four elections on a voting machine with a paper trail and four elections on a machine with an audio trail. There were purposeful mistakes inserted into the audits on some of the machines. Results from the study indicated that participants were able to find almost 10 times as many errors in the audio audit then they were able to find in the paper trail. Voters’ attitudes towards the paper audit were extremely apathetic, and voters did not spend much time reviewing their paper record. When asked which type of audit voters would prefer for their own county elections, almost all voters preferred the VVPAT. These results indicate that newer alternative audit technology holds great promise in delivering a safe and accurate audit and further that paper trails have some significant design obstacles that need to be overcome before they will be effective audits. Thesis Supervisor: Ted Selker Title: Associate Professor, Program in Media Arts and Sciences
[1]
Ted Selker.
Processes Can Improve Electronic Voting: A Case Study of An Election
,
2004
.
[2]
Dan S. Wallach,et al.
Analysis of an electronic voting system
,
2004,
IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, 2004. Proceedings. 2004.
[3]
Jeremy Epstein,et al.
Electronic Voting
,
2007,
Computer.
[4]
Ted Selker,et al.
Fixing the vote.
,
2004,
Scientific American.
[5]
Ted Selker.
The Voter Verifiable Audio Audit Transcript Trail (VVAATT)
,
2004
.
[6]
Ted Selker,et al.
Orienting Graphical User Interfaces Reduces Errors: The Low Error Voting Interface
,
2005
.
[7]
Rebecca T. Mercuri.
A better ballot box
,
2002
.