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Point, Click, and Vote - The Future of Internet Voting (Paperback)
Loot Price: R520
Discovery Miles 5 200
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Point, Click, and Vote - The Future of Internet Voting (Paperback)
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Loot Price R520
Discovery Miles 5 200
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"Whether responding to a CNN.com survey or voting for the NFL
All-Pro team, computer users are becoming more and more comfortable
with Internet polls. Computer use in the United States continues to
grow-more than half of all American households now have a personal
computer. The next question, then, becomes obvious. Should
Americans be able to use the Internet in the most important polls
of all? Some advocates of Internet voting argue that Americans are
well suited to casting their ballots online in political elections.
They are eager to make use of new technology, and they have
relatively broad access to the Internet. Voting would become easier
for people stuck at home, at the office, or on the road. Internet
voting might encourage greater political participation among young
adults, a group that stays away from the polling place in droves.
It would hold special appeal for military personnel overseas, whose
ability to vote is a growing concern. There are serious concerns,
however, regarding computer security and voter fraud, unequal
Internet access across socioeconomic lines (the ""digital
divide""), and the civic consequences of moving elections away from
schools and other polling places and into private homes and
offices. After all, showing up to vote is the most public civic
activity many Americans engage in, and it is often their only overt
participation in the democratic process. In Point, Click, and Vote,
voting experts Michael Alvarez and Thad Hall make a strong case for
greater experimentation with Internet voting. In their words,
""There is no way to know whether any argument regarding Internet
voting is accurate unless real Internet voting systems are tested,
and they should be tested in small-scale, scientific trials so that
their successes and failures can be evaluated."" In other words,
you never know until you try, and it's time to try harder. The
authors offer a realistic plan for putting pilot remote Internet
voting programs into effect nationwide. Such programs would allow
U.S. voters in selected areas to cast their ballots over any
Internet connection; they would not even need to leave home. If
these pilot programs are successful, the next step is to consider
how they might be implemented on a larger scale in future
elections. "
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