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An independent committee is looking into the alleged security flaws of an e-voting system set to be used for the next European and regional elections. The report is due out on 1 May.
The Irish Citizens for Trustworthy e-voting (ICTE) - a watchdog group made up of computing experts, academics and citizens - says the system does not eliminate the risk of votes being recorded incorrectly. If this were to happen, whether because of flaws in the software or "by malicious intent", it says a recount would be impossible. ICTE therefore proposes that a paper ballot be produced by the machine to confirm individual polls so that voters can check that their choice has been recorded properly. The paper would then be placed in a separate box for a possible future recount.
In the US, similar security doubts led the Pentagon to scrap its e-voting plans after experts concluded that the system posed a serious risk of election fraud. The experts even went as far as to say that Internet voting should not take place until both the Internet infrastructure or the personal computer were "fundamentally changed."
At EU level, the Commission recently organised a seminar on e-democracy as a follow-up to its September 2003 communication on e-government (see EurActiv's new, fully updated
LinksDossier on e-government). Responding to EurActiv in january, an expert from Gallup Europe expressed doubts on the idea of online voting altogether (see EurActiv, 13 January 2004).