Residual Votes Attributable to Technology: An Assessment of the Reliability of Existing Voting Equipment
Author(s)
Alvarez, Michael; Ansolabehere, Stephen; Antonsson, Erik; Bruck, Jehoshua; Graves, Steven; Palfrey, Thomas; Negroponte, Nicholas Peter; Rivest, Ronald L.; Selker, Ted; Slocum, Alexander H.; Stewart III, Charles H.; ... Show more Show less
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Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
American elections are conducted using a hodge-podge of different voting technologies: paper ballots, lever machines, punch cards, optically scanned ballots, and electronic machines. And the technologies we use change frequently. Over the last two decades, counties have moved away from paper ballots and lever machines and toward optically scanned ballots and electronic machines. The changes have not occurred from a concerted initiative, but from local experimentation. Some local governments have even opted to go back to the older methods of paper and levers.
Date issued
2001-03-30Publisher
Caltech/MIT Voting Technology Project
Series/Report no.
VTP Working Paper Series;2
Keywords
Voting equipment, Voting technology reliability, Residual votes, Overvotes, Undervotes