Latest Channel 4 News:
Car giant emerges from bankruptcy
Hundreds mourn fallen soldiers
Major blaze in central London
Toy shop sorry over computer porn
A royal occasion for Royle Liz

'Serious concerns' over e-voting

Updated on 20 June 2007

Source PA News

Computer experts invited to observe last month's elections have raised "serious concerns" over the use of new electronic voting technology.

The Open Rights Group (ORG) said it could not express confidence in the election results recorded in areas where it observed the counting of votes.

And the group said that, following the experiences of May 3 when new voting systems led to large numbers of spoilt ballots in the Scottish Parliament elections and confusion at counts for English local authorities, it remains opposed to the introduction of e-voting and e-counting in the UK.

The May elections saw a number of trials of new voting methods, including voting by telephone or computer and electronic counting of ballot papers.

Their report records "chaotic scenes", with counts slowed by malfunctioning scanners and software errors, as well as fold marks, perforations and tears making ballot papers unreadable to scanners.

Laptop computers used for voting in Swindon proved "unreliable", while online voters in Sheffield "had trouble casting their votes", according to the report.

Telephone voting systems appeared to cause particular difficulty to the elderly and housebound - the groups they were intended to help.

The ORG raised concerns that e-voting elections are "open to error and fraud" because they use "black box systems" where the mechanisms for recording and tabulating the vote are hidden away, making public scrutiny impossible.

The lack of reliable "audit trails" allowing counts to be checked meant that there was "no meaningful way to verify that voters' intentions had been accurately counted".

The report warned that insufficient time was given to English councils to prepare for e-voting pilots, resulting in a "completely inadequate" timescale for development and implementation of robust systems.

These news feeds are provided by an independent third party and Channel 4 is not responsible or liable to you for the same.

Send this article by email


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Science Technology & Environment news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Swine flu: what to do

(Getty)

Up to date advice and information on the swine flu outbreak.

Most watched

Most watched

Find out what's getting people clicking online this week.

Right now on Twitter

channel4news

RT @Jon_Bernstein Fox News anchor to Rupert Murdoch: "Mr Chairman sir, why are you so great?' http://bit.ly/bwyPF

Today at 13:54

Follow us

How to tweet

How and why to follow the Channel 4 News family on Twitter.




Channel 4 © 2009. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.