DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Theory v. Practice in Electronic Voting Michael I. Shamos, Ph.D., J.D. Co-Director, Institute for eCommerce Carnegie Mellon University
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Voting System Certification Before voting equipment can be used or “offered for sale” in a state, it must be certified by the state Certification procedures differ among the states Most require examination by a statutory panel of examiners I was an examiner for –Pennsylvania ( ) –Texas ( ) –West Virginia (1982) –Delaware (1989) –Nevada (1995) Examined ~100 different voting systems
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Outline Voting history Voting administration General voting model Vulnerabilities Important problems
History of Voting Ancient: clash of spears, division by groups, wooden tickets (tabellæ), balls in urns “ballot” from Italian ballotta, meaning “little ball” American colonies: voting aloud to public official Early 1800s: Handwritten paper ballots 1857: Australia introduces secret paper ballot 1888: Australian ballot introduced in U.S. (KY, MA) 1892: Mechanical lever machine to “protect mechanically the voter from rascaldom” 1960s: Punched cards 1970s: Optical scan 1978: Direct-recording electronic systems 2000: Internet voting in primaries
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Paper Ballots Original paper ballots were handwritten. Easy to identify voter! Australian ballot (U.S., 1888) SOURCE: DOUGLAS W. JONES
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Paper Ballots 1/27/ /29/1864
New York Times, April 4, 1855 BALLOT BOXES DESTROYED INJURIES IN RIOTS MORE BALLOTS CAST THAN NAMES ON THE POLL LIST
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Voting Irregularities “The ballots shall first be counted, and, if the number of ballots exceeds the number of persons who voted … the ballots shall be placed back into the box, and one of the inspectors shall publicly draw out and destroy unopened as many ballots as are equal to such excess.” F.S. § F.S. § “If two or more ballots are found folded together to present the appearance of a single ballot … if, upon comparison of the … appearance of such ballots, a majority of the inspectors are of the opinion that the ballots were voted by one person, such ballots shall be destroyed.” F.S. § F.S. §
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS New York Times, January 12, 1925
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Voting is an Ill-Conditioned Problem Consider a two-candidate election with n voters Let e (error) be the fraction of votes that can be counted incorrectly without changing the result Let p be the fraction of voters who prefer candidate A As n grows and p 0.5, we must have e < 1/n to obtain the correct result But e does not decrease as n increases
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Florida Vote Totals 8:00 a.m. Nov. 15, 2000 SOURCE: CNN.COM MARGIN WAS 300 OUT OF 5,820,684 VOTES = 1 IN 20,000 FEC STANDARDS ALLOW AN ERROR OF ~1 IN 2000 BALLOTS
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS What’s the Chance of a Repeat? Assume we draw 6 million samples with equal probability of choosing A or B (voters are truly indifferent) What is the probability margin(x) that | A – B | < x? (1225 is the standard deviation of the binomial distribution with n = 6,000,000, p = 0.5) margin(300) > 19%! margin(16) > 1% Final Bush-Gore margin was 537; margin(537) > 33%!
Voting Administration in the U.S. Voting in the U.S. is conducted by the states –50 states + DC + territories –Supervised by Secretaries of State through “elections bureau” –Process delegated to counties, supervised by county clerk 3141 counties in the U.S. ~170,000 precincts (wards, etc.), about 54/county 205M eligible voters; 150M registered voters; 105M actual voters; 1M poll workers Federal government has only limited constitutional power over voting procedures –Certain “Federal offices,” e.g. U.S. Senator –Constitutional rights, e.g. “equal protection” –Can’t conduct elections
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS U.S. Voting Methods Punched-card (32%) Optical scan (28%) Lever (16%) DRE (12%) Paper (1%) Indeterminate: (11%) PUNCHED CARD OPTICAL LEVER DRE ? 2000 PAPER Optical scan (34%) DRE (31%) Lever (14%) Punched-card (14%) Paper (1%) Indeterminate: (6%) DRE CARD OPTICAL LEVER ? 2004
The Voting Process VOTER REGISTRATION AUTHORITY ELECTION AUTHORITY 18. TABULATE VOTES 1. PRESENT CREDENTIALS 2. RECEIVE TOKEN A CERTIFYING AUTHORITY VENDOR 3. SUBMIT DEVICE AND SOFTWARE 4. CERTIFY DEVICE AND SOFTWARE VOTING DEVICE 5. FURNISH DEVICE TO COUNTY 6. FURNISH SOFTWARE SETUP SLATE 7. “BALLOT PROGRAMMING” PRESENT SLATE 8. LOAD ELECTION DATA POLL AUTHORITY ELECTION DAY 9. TURN ON DEVICE 10. PRESENT TOKEN A 11. RECEIVE VOTING TOKEN B 12. PRESENT VOTING TOKEN B 13. PRESENT SLATE 14. CAPTURE CHOICES CAPTURE VOTE 15. PROVIDE VERIFICATION RECORD VOTE 16. STORE VOTES TABULATION DEVICE 17. TRANSMIT VOTES 19. TRANSMIT TOTALS WINNERS 20. CERTIFY RESULTS
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Counting Punched Cards SOURCE: LOS ANGELES COUNTY
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Vulnerabilities in the Process Registration –Authentication of credentials –Registration of dead voters, voters who have moved, etc. Registered voter tokens –Forgery –Transferability Voting System Vendors –No requirements –No accountability –Tendency to hide behind trade secret claims to conceal defects –What’s in the software?
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Vulnerabilities II Certification –Role of “Independent Testing Authorities” –Federal Election Commission standards –Lack of meaningful state certification (usually check only for conformance to state law) –Lack of meaningful code review, source or object Distribution and storage of machines –Vendor modifications and maintenance –Insider modifications and maintenance –Intruder access
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Vulnerabilities III Distribution and storage of software –Lack of central distribution –Presence of central distribution –Vendor, insider, intruder modification –Testing procedures Ballot (slate) programming –Error –Delegation to vendor –Control over ballot programming (memory packs, etc.) –Connection between candidate names and voting positions
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Vulnerabilities IV Polling place procedures –Poll worker training –Testing procedures, verification of slate –Error recovery, irregularities, power failure –Voter education Voting –Connection between registration token and vote? (Privacy) –Multiple voting –Tampering with machines, stuffing, alteration of ballots –Choice capture, confusion, early completion, fleeing voter –Verification –Vote storage, redundancy, ballot images
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Vulnerabilities V Transmission and tabulation of votes –How do they get to the tabulation device? –Authentication and accounting for memory packs –Avoiding multiple counting Post-election procedures –Testing –Impound, custody over software, slate programming –Canvass –Retally –Recount
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS FEC Standards Focus on mechanical reliability, not security Example: Volume I Standard , “Protection Against Malicious Software”: “Voting systems shall deploy protection against the many forms of threats to which they may be exposed such as file and macro viruses, worms, Trojan horses, and logic bombs. Vendors shall develop and document the procedures to be followed to ensure that such protection is maintained in a current status.”
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Complications Ballot complexity, e.g. 135 candidates Straight-party voting Ballot (slate) rotation Split precincts Vote-for-many Language Write-in votes Spoiled, invalid, damaged, defaced ballots Open ballot –W.V. Constitution “In all elections by the people, the mode of voting shall be by ballot; but the voter shall be left free to vote by either open, sealed or secret ballot, as he may elect.”
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Complications Absentee voting Early voting Challenged voters Disabled access, e.g. audio ballots Huge variety of state-imposed requirements
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS What’s an Audit Trail? Two types: –A. Record of voting system events, e.g. opening of polls –B. Record of ballot images In Maryland, a voting system must be “be capable of creating a paper record of all votes cast in order that an audit trail is available in the event of a recount.” Md. Election Law § 9-102(c)(1)(vi) Md. Election Law § 9-102(c)(1)(vi) This is done by storing complete ballot images in randomized order
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS What’s a Recount? Purpose: “verify” that the original tabulation was correct Three kinds of recounts: –A. Physical ballots exist: Count them again. –B. Computer records exist: Tabulate them again. –C. No physical ballots or computer records exist (e.g. lever machines): Read the counters again
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Desirable Voting System Characteristics Secret Accurate Eligible voters Vote once only Tamper-proof Reliable Auditable No vote-buying (receipt-free) Verifiable Non-coercible Transparent MOST STATES REQUIRE NO STATES REQUIRE (except coercion is a crime)
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Role of Cryptography in Voting Profound BUT: To be adopted, protocols must deal with ALL vulnerabilities, not just theoretically convenient ones Transparency problem: not enough people understand cryptography or the claims made for it Requires reliance on a small community of experts Naming problem: few politicians will vote for “homomorphic” anything
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Absentee Voting Of the 105 million registered voters, ~ 5 million are unable to vote on Election Day because of inability to comply with absentee voting requirements Almost 5% of the electorate wants to vote but can’t Bush-Gore was decided by a margin of 0.01% in Florida, 1/500 of the non-voting absentee population The biggest problem in voting is not tampering or paper trails, but how to include the absentees
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Q A &
Voting Law Environment U.S. Constitution Federal law State constitutions State law State administrative regulations Local practices
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Constitutional Review Presidential elections: “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress.” U.S. Const. Art II, §1Art II, §1 “The Congress may determine the Time of chusing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States.” U.S. Const. Art II, §1Art II, §1 Tuesday after the first Monday in November 3 U.S. §1.3 U.S. §1 If no winner on election day, “the electors may be appointed on a subsequent day in such a manner as the legislature of such State may direct.” 3 U.S. §2.3 U.S. §2
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Federal Election Comission Role of the FEC in voting in the United States None! The FEC enforces campaign financing laws assists states with voter registration
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Functions of a Voting System 1. Present candidates and issues to the voter (HCI) 2. Capture the voter’s preferences (HCI) 3. Transport preferences to counting location 4. Add up the vote totals (tabulation) 5. Publish the vote totals (reporting) 6. Provide audit mechanisms But: vote must be secret
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Paper (1.7%) Ridiculous! –Requires manual counting –Easy fraud –Ballot stuffing –Invalidation SOURCE: TOMPKINS COUNTY, NYTOMPKINS COUNTY, NY X OVERVOTE CANCELS VOTE FOR MAYOR
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Mark Sense, Optical Scan (24.6%) TIMING MARKS START OF BALLOT
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Mark-Sense, Optical Scan (24.6%) Scanning methods –Visible light –Infrared Issues: –Dark/light marks –Some scanners require carbon-based ink –Voter intent may not be captured by machine Machine does not see what the human sees
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Direct-Recording Electronic (7.7%) SOURCE: SHOUP VOTING SOLUTIONSSHOUP VOTING SOLUTIONS
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Direct-Recording Electronic (7.7%) SOURCE: SHOUP VOTING SOLUTIONSSHOUP VOTING SOLUTIONS
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Punched-Card Problems Can’t see whom you’re voting for Registration of card in ballot frame Must use stylus: no positive feedback on punch Hanging chad: chad that is partially attached to the card –How may corners? –Hanging chad causes count to differ every time Dimple: chad that is completely attached but shows evidence of an attempt to punch –Dimple can turn into a vote on multiple readings
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Buchanan Vote by County (Florida, 2000) GRAPH COURTESY OF PROF. GREG ADAMS CARNEGIE MELLON & PROF. CHRIS FASTNOW CHATHAM COLLEGE SOURCE: PROF. GREG ADAMSPROF. GREG ADAMS Broward (Fort Lauderdale) Miami-Dade Hillsborough (Tampa) Pinellas (St. Petersburg-Clearwater) Orange (Orlando) LINEAR FIT WITHOUT PALM BEACH, BROWARD, MIAMI-DADE (PURPLE ANNOTATIONS ADDED)
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Election Contest The certification of election or nomination of any person to office, or of the result on any question submitted by referendum, may be contested in the circuit court by any unsuccessful candidate for such office... or by any taxpayer, respectively. The grounds for contesting an election under this section are:.... –(c) Receipt of a number of illegal votes or rejection of a number of legal votes sufficient to change or place in doubt the result of the election. … –(e) Any other cause or allegation which, if sustained, would show that a person other than the successful candidate was the person duly nominated or elected to the office in question or that the outcome of the election on a question submitted by referendum was contrary to the result declared by the canvassing board or election board.” F.S. § F.S. § Successful challenge results in a “judgment of ouster.”
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Recounts in Florida If a candidate is defeated by 1/2% or less, the board responsible for certifying the results... shall order a recount of the votes cast with respect to such office. F.S. § (3)(c). Or: candidate may protest to county canvassing boardF.S. § (3)(c) “If there is a discrepancy which could affect the outcome of an election, the canvassing board may recount the ballots on the automatic tabulating equipment.” F.S. § (3)(c).F.S. § (3)(c) “The county canvassing board may authorize a manual recount.” F.S. § (4)(c). F.S. § (4)(c) “Each duplicate ballot shall be compared with the original ballot to ensure the correctness of the duplicate.” F.S. § F.S. §
DIMACS ELECTRONIC VOTING MAY 26, 2004 COPYRIGHT © 2004 MICHAEL I. SHAMOS Manual Recount “If the manual recount indicates an error in the vote tabulation which could affect the outcome of the election, the county canvassing board shall: –(a) Correct the error and recount the remaining precincts with the vote tabulation system; –(b) Request the Department of State to verify the tabulation software; or –(c) Manually recount all ballots.” F.S. § (5) “Procedures for a manual recount are as follows: –(a) The county canvassing board shall appoint as many counting teams of at least two electors as is necessary to manually recount the ballots. –(b) If a counting team is unable to determine a voter's intent in casting a ballot, the ballot shall be presented to the county canvassing board for it to determine the voter's intent.” F.S. § (7)