Voter-verified paper audit trail

From SourceWatch
Jump to navigation Jump to search
You Have the Right to Vote.jpg

This page is part of the Election Protection Wiki,
a non-partisan, non-profit collaboration of citizens, activists and researchers to collect reports of voter suppression and the systemic threats to election integrity.

Things you can do:


Home | EPWiki Google Group | Other states | EP issues | EP news | Get active at VSW | Related: Wiki the Vote

A Voter-verified paper audit trail is a printout that, at least in theory, serves to verify the output of a direct recording electronic voting machine (DRE). In practice, the following objections have been raised:

  • There is no guarantee that the printout matches the candidate selected by the voter.
  • Voters frequently fail to consult the printout, especially when they do not know it is present.
  • It is unclear what should happen when a voter detects a discrepancy between the candidate selected and the one written to the printout.
  • The printout is often written sequentially to a "toilet paper"-style roll, which means that individual votes could theoretically be matched to the people who made them, as long as the order in which they voted was known.
  • The printers frequently fail, with the failures often going undetected.
  • The printouts are easily torn or otherwise damaged.

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References


External resources

External articles

This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.