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schneierBruce SchneierSCHNEIER:F58130690199FAB0E131FA845B51034D
HistoryJan 27, 2020 - 12:03 p.m.

Smartphone Election in Washington State

2020-01-2712:03:15
Bruce Schneier
www.schneier.com
29

This year:

> King County voters will be able to use their name and birthdate to log in to a Web portal through the Internet browser on their phones, says Bryan Finney, the CEO of Democracy Live, the Seattle-based voting company providing the technology.
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> Once voters have completed their ballots, they must verify their submissions and then submit a signature on the touch screen of their device.
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> Finney says election officials in Washington are adept at signature verification because the state votes entirely by mail. That will be the way people are caught if they log in to the system under false pretenses and try to vote as someone else.
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> The King County elections office plans to print out the ballots submitted electronically by voters whose signatures match and count the papers alongside the votes submitted through traditional routes.
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> While advocates say this creates an auditable paper trail, many security experts say that because the ballots cross the Internet before they are printed, any subsequent audits on them would be moot. If a cyberattack occurred, an audit could essentially require double-checking ballots that may already have been altered, says Buell.

Of course it’s not an auditable paper trail. There’s a reason why security experts use the phrase β€œvoter-verifiable paper ballots.” A centralized printout of a received Internet message is not voter verifiable.

Another news article.