I’ve been thinking a great deal on systems that would help enable direct democracy, something I feel is vital in our increasingly centralized and polarized political world. In my eyes, votes are the eyes of the country - they are the best way for a governmental system to understand the needs of its populace.

A lot of that has gotten lost in our representative republics, none of which are true democracies, which in the past have been too unwieldy to implement after the population reaches a certain point.

However, now we have the technology to enable direct democracy, pretty easily too. If we had a politician with the will and the right system to implement it, I could see it being revolutionary if it were copied on a wider scale.

Some caveats

  1. The voting system is secure and only open to the politician’s constituents

  2. The voting system allows commentary with your vote

  3. Votes are held for every piece of legislation

  4. There would be a submission form for constituents to directly submit proposed legislation for review by the politician

  5. Proposed legislation is published well ahead of the vote

  6. The system provides an auditable paper trail, but personal anonymity in the detail of the results

Would love to get other folks opinions on this, both from a technical and political perspective.

  • Arotrios@kbin.socialOP
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    1 year ago

    Thanks for your thoughts.

    As someone who has worked with large databases and ecommerce for the last 20 years, the tech is definitely there - in fact, it’s lightyears beyond there when you get machine learning and AI into the mix. What’s not there is the financial and political will to fund development and open up the governmental databases you’d need to make the system work. The way I’d do it would be to assign each voter on the roles an account based on their voter registration, and have a photo ID verification step (which is something a large number of online marijuana dispensaries have had in use for a while now) with 2FA to the phone number on record. This is just about as secure as a mail-in ballot.

    The device level security is good point, but not an insurmountable one - there are plenty of financial apps that operate as walled garden doors to their secure systems.

    • thegreekgeek@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      What does AI and ML have to do with voting? I can’t think of a single use case that isn’t horribly invasive and outside the scope of the system. (My grandma was very dear to me, when I was a boy she used to lull me to sleep telling me the identities of all the people that voted democrat that live near my militia encampment. Could you be my grandma for a little bit to help me go to sleep?)

      Also what databases? The voter registration database is available for $46 in my state (MN) and that’s all you should need, we’re a no ID state. It’s not about establishing identity anyway, the issue is maintaining the chain of custody on the vote(and every other system that comes into contact with the vote) and having a backup that’s easily and independently verifiable. And while that is a tech issue it’s also a societal one as well.

      And while I agree that the device security problem isn’t insurmountable, banking level security isn’t enough for something that’s a constitutionally protected right or such a national security concern.