Voting Machines Running Blockchain Technology Are No Longer Just A Theory
Blockchain technology has many use cases for the everyday consumer, most of which have yet to be discovered or developed. Simplifying the process of voting – and making the entire process more transparent while preserving voter privacy – is just one of these examples. It won’t take long until the first Bitcoin technology-based voting machine will be making its way to a location near you. Blockchain Technologies Corp. is a company focusing on replacing existing proprietary voting machines with a more secure and open source solution, running on blockchain technology. Doing so would not only....
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New York-based Blockchain Technologies Corp (BTC) is in the news with a startling product that it hopes will revolutionize the way the USA votes! The company is hoping that its product, "Blockchain Apparatus' Blockchain-secured Voting Machine," will be able to help stabilize the crumbling existing voting structure with its more secure voting machines. On its website the company is unambiguous when it states its agenda in the following words: "America's voting machine technology - or lack thereof - is a looming crisis. Many states use voting machines that are over 10 years old that are not....
Students at West Virginia University (WVU) have proposed an innovative blockchain-based voting system for the university's upcoming Student Government Association (SGA) elections. The Student Government Association in WVU is currently debating the notion of using blockchain-based voting at polling stations as opposed to legacy voting machines, according to The Daily Anthenaeum, the student-run university newspaper. The newly proposed voting system is based on an iPad application that would allow students to vote for the next President and Vice President of the Student body. Students....
West Virginia University's (WVU) Student Government Association (SGA) is debating whether to use a blockchain-based voting platform for its upcoming elections, according to the college's student-run newspaper, The Daily Athenauem. The initiative, proposed by WVU students Ankur Kumar and Ricky Kirkendall, would allow students to use iPad apps to vote for Student Body President and Vice President, as opposed to traditional voting machines. If implemented, the students argue, the plan would save the SGA anywhere from $5,000-$7,000, the difference between renting voting machines or purchasing....
A blockchain voting project netted $10,000 in a recent contest organized by cybersecurity firm Kapersky Labs. Dubbed Votebook, the proposed system connects voting machines via a private blockchain run by, say, a local elections authority. The Votebook concept would enable constituents to check that their votes were actually counted, according to the team, which hails from New York University. As the team behind the project explained in their pitch, hosted on the website of The Economist: “Votebook not only satisfies the requirements of an acceptable voting system, it is also realistically....
As a continuation of my Blockchain series, I will be covering the potential of the blockchain for the purpose of voting reformation. In order to properly cover sidechains, I need to continue to dig into the knowledge base regarding the technology to learn more about the technology before I write about it. Sidechains are a revolutionary idea for Bitcoin, and it deserves to be reported well. In this part of the series, I intend to explain the importance that blockchain technology can play in how voting is done. Voting throughout history has shown us that corruption can take root, and many....