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E-voting banned by Dutch government

Because of a risk of eavesdropping the government of the Netherlands has banned electronic voting machines from future elections, and will return to paper voting.

โ€œResearch indicates that a secure voting machine that is immune to the risks of eavesdropping canโ€™t be guaranteed. Developing new equipment furthermore requires a large investment, both financially and in terms of organization. The administration judges that this offers insufficient added value over voting by paper and pencil,โ€ the Ministry of Internal Affairs said last week.

In its decision, the government also banned so-called voting printers. Because they leave a paper trail, the printers had been suggested as a potential alternative to traditional voting computers that store the vote counts in their memory.

A group of experts headed by Bart Jacobs, a professor at Radboud University in Nijmegen, dismissed the printer option. The group concluded that โ€œeven with regular testing of each printer, it canโ€™t be guaranteed that all devices stay within the required emission limitsโ€ that safeguard against eavesdropping.

Instead of electronic voting machines, the nation will now shift focus to electronic vote counting. Election officials will initiate tests where a person will read out the elected name on the voting form. In one test, a second person will count the vote by scanning a barcode. A second test will use a special counting-device.

The reliability of voting machines marks a victory for a local activist group called โ€œWij vertrouwen stemcomputers nietโ€ (โ€œWe donโ€™t trust voting computersโ€) that is headed up by noted Dutch computer hacker Rop Gonggrijp.
The group published a note on its Web site on Friday declaring victory: โ€œWe, the proponents of election results that can be verified, are winning all over the world!โ€

The group cited earlier rulings against voting machines in other regions including California, Germany, the U.K., Ireland and Italy. โ€œProtests are being held all over the world. Voting without a paper trail is on its way out,โ€ the group cheered.

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