> > at Thursday, March 06, 2003 5:02 PM, Ed Gerck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was seen > > to say: > > > On the other hand, photographing a paper receipt behind a glass, which > > > receipt is printed after your vote choices are final, is not readily > > > deniable because that receipt is printed only after you confirm your > > > choices. > > as has been pointed out repeatedly - either you have some way to "bin" > > the receipt and start over, or it is worthless (and merely confirms you > > made a bad vote without giving you any opportunity to correct it) > > That given, you could vote once for each party, take your photograph, > > void the vote (and receipt) for each one, and then vote the way you > > originally intended to :) > No, as I commented before, voiding the vote in that proposal after the paper > receipt is printed is a serious matter -- it means that either the machine made > an error in recording the e-vote or (as it is oftentimes neglected) the machine > made an error in printing the vote. Or more probably, as seen in the american case - the user didn't understand the interface and voted wrongly. of course, you could avoid this by stating that the voting software displays the vote and gives a yes/no choice before printing the slip, but there is no reason to actually display the slip if there is no hope of voiding it short of storming out of the booth and demanding someone "fix" it.