Authors
Matthew Bernhard, Allison McDonald, Henry Meng, Jensen Hwa, Nakul Bajaj, Kevin Chang, J Alex Halderman
Publication date
2020/5/18
Conference
2020 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP)
Pages
679-694
Publisher
IEEE
Description
Ballot marking devices (BMDs) allow voters to select candidates on a computer kiosk, which prints a paper ballot that the voter can review before inserting it into a scanner to be tabulated. Unlike paperless voting machines, BMDs provide voters an opportunity to verify an auditable physical record of their choices, and a growing number of U.S. jurisdictions are adopting them for all voters. However, the security of BMDs depends on how reliably voters notice and correct any adversarially induced errors on their printed ballots. In order to measure voters' error detection abilities, we conducted a large study (N = 241) in a realistic polling place setting using real voting machines that we modified to introduce an error into each printout. Without intervention, only 40% of participants reviewed their printed ballots at all, and only 6.6% told a poll worker something was wrong. We also find that carefully designed interventions …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Bernhard, A McDonald, H Meng, J Hwa, N Bajaj… - 2020 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP), 2020