Rob the Wop wrote:So yes, I know a hell of a lot better than you how to unlock a car door with a small high frequency transmitter. I also have an idea on what it would take to interrupt a large, secure government network having worked on them.
You're missing an important point- you're saying this system would be secure from
outside interference. Who's responsible for gerrymandering and the Bush-Gore election debacle? Those in charge of the system. This is what I don't get about you- you're arguing that electronic voting machines
can be
made so that they would be secure and accurate, and I'm saying yes, well,
maybe they
could, but
currently they are not, and I don't see our "leaders" making any great effort to see to it that they are improved. Judging from history, I think we can expect them to repeat behavior we've seen in the past, namely, at best implementing systems that are substandard due to political favors, and at worst rigging elections. But I guess saying that makes me a nut, stuff like that only happened in the past, we're all more evolved now and will just do the right thing, right?
Rob the Wop wrote:Currently you are on a "pull weird science facts out of your ass" mode. Convince me that your little "magic button" isn't pulled from your ass by a simple high level technical discussion on what it would take to accomplish this proceedure.
And you're on a "I know more about the technical side of this than you do so I'm automatically right" mode.
For instance, just because you may know how the text messaging system for celphones works doesn't mean it's a superior system to using the phone to call someone and just talk to them. So your attempts to win the argument by waving your specialty in my face miss the point. I'll cede your superior knowledge of the technology, but not the likelihood that it will be abused by corrupt men. Unless you're prepared to explain to me why an electronic voting machine CANNOT be made to show whatever it's programmer wants it to.
As for banking, 2 points spring to mind immediately;
1) They have a vested interest in being percieved as trustworthy and accurate, since you can take your business elsewhere.
2) They are overseen by regulatory agencies. Who oversees our government? The media? There's a weak joke.
Rob the Wop wrote:Is electronic voting perfect? Not yet. It's still incredibely new. VERY rarely implemented in this country, at least when I researched it.
Are there benefits from going to an electronic voting methodology. YES. HUGE ONES.
What are they? Are they more important than transparency, accuracy, and a paper audit trail?
Rob the Wop wrote:Saying we shouldn't use an electronic voting medium only because it's an electronic voting medium is blinding your eyes. This is the kind of discussion that triggers me to babbling more than I am accustomed.
I'm not objecting to it just because it's electronic.
I'm objecting to it because we cannot be sure that what we choose gets counted correctly. See III's argument about the high school programmer.
You know this, there are a bazillion things that go on
invisibly inside a computer to make it do the things it does.
I'm objecting to it because it's not transparent, not secure, not ACCURATE for crying out loud, and not easily auditable, so I guess you can stop babbling and explain to me how I'm wrong about these five points.
Be the dime you seek.