@eintaluj saidSo you're saying having an ID does not stop voter fraud if the system is broken. Which is true. I'm saying that it's a slight help if the system is decent, which it is over here. In the USA as it is today, it would cause more problems than it would solve.
In Estonia, we have a digital voting system.
To my knowledge, it is used only in Estonia and, recently, in Russia.
To vote, I need only my ID-card and a password.
By the way: and .
@shallow-blue saidIn Estonia:
So you're saying having an ID does not stop voter fraud if the system is broken. Which is true. I'm saying that it's a slight help if the system is decent, which it is over here. In the USA as it is today, it would cause more problems than it would solve.
By the way: [youtube]w3_0x6oaDmI[/youtube] and [youtube]LkH2r-sNjQs[/youtube].
The ID card together with the password has the following security issues:
1) The real voter is not physically detected.
Old people gave their ID cards to someone together with the password. Because they do not know how to use the computer, how to use the ID card program (that has systematic technical problems), how to use the voting program.
Statistics show that a large number of votes to the same political party are coming from the same place, same computer, at the same time.
2) There is a possibility to change your vote when voting over the internet.
3) Theoretically, those who do NOT vote, can be used to add the votes to someone without the knowledge of the voter.
The system cannot be really checked. Even the disks with the data are quickly destroyed.
The old system that the voter has to physically identify itself is much safer.
In the US:
You must be kidding. Voting, using the regular mail is nonsense. Donald Trump is absolutely right concerning THIS point.