|
The recent New Democratic Party convention in Toronto may have done
more than just select Thomas Mulcair as the party's new leader.
My weekly technology law column (Toronto
Star version, homepage
version) notes that it may
have also buried the prospect of online voting in Canada for the
foreseeable future. While Internet-based voting supporters have
consistently maintained that the technology is safe and secure, the
NDP's experience - in which a denial of service attack resulted in long
delays and inaccessible websites - demonstrates that turning to
Internet voting in an election involving millions of voters would be
irresponsible and risky.
As voter turnout has steadily declined in recent years, Elections
Canada has focused on increasing participation by studying
Internet-based voting alternatives. The appeal of online voting is
obvious. Canadians bank online, take education courses online, watch
movies online, share their life experiences through social networks
online, and access government information and services online. Given
the integral role the Internet plays in our daily lives, why not vote
online as well?
The NDP
experience provides a compelling answer.
Slashdot, Digg, Del.icio.us, Newsfeeder, Reddit, StumbleUpon, TwitterTagsShareTuesday April 03, 2012 |
|
View
|
|
|