1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to a device, improved ballot and improved method to register an individual's vote during any type of election and referendum processes.
2. Discussion of Prior Art
The prior art contains hundreds of examples of different voting systems, both mechanical and electronic. Slowly, voting systems have been evolving to simplify the process of voting, increase security, and reduce the costs and complexity inherent to an election process. Over time, mechanical voting systems have been almost completely substituted by electronic voting systems of different fashions.
In the prior art, there are several modes in which a voter can enter his or her election choice into an electronic voting machine, the most common fashion still relying on a voter entering vote selections on a paper ballot through manual marking, and then scanning the marked ballot to digitize the cast votes and optimize the totalization and outputting process (e.g., Narey, U.S. Pat. No. 4,813,708). The disadvantages of these voting methods and systems has been thoroughly discussed in the prior art.
Further approaches have eliminated the need to print millions of paper ballots by introducing purpose-specific, vote-casting machines (e.g., Boram, U.S. Pat. No. 4,461,240) that can be election-customized by affixing a ballot overlay over it containing candidate and election data for a specific voting process and precinct. One of the main drawbacks of this approach is the fact that generally custom devices need to be produced, which process may result in undesirably high costs, especially for elections in which several dozens of candidates are vying for a single office. Moreover, the cost of building and maintaining custom devices is generally higher when compared to deploying and maintaining commercial, off-the-shelf devices, such as bar code scanners.
The main object of the disclosed voting device, ballot and voting method is to provide an alternative to prior art that further reduces costs and logistics complexity associated with elections processes.
Accordingly, several objects of the invention are:
To overcome the disadvantages of the prior art, an improved voting device can be used in conjunction with an improved ballot and method of voters making voting choices. The improved voting device may consist of existing off-the-shelf products and therefore it can significantly reduce the total cost of an elections process by reducing the cost of the voting systems deployed to voting precincts. The disclosed voting device is used in conjunction with an improved ballot, which only requires that a single ballot be printed for every precinct and ballot style possible, thus eliminating the need to produce one ballot for every voter and reducing the cost and complexity of the logistics associated with an elections process.
The disclosed voting device is meant for use as an attachment to a prior art electronic voting machine, which hosts the voting device and which may potentially be any suitable electronic voting machine (and totalization system) in the prior art (such as the AES-3000 model produced by Smartmatic). The voting device has optical scanning capabilities, such as found in a bar code or other type of prior art optical reader. In addition, the voting device is of a handheld nature, so that a voter can hold it in his or her hands to perform the voting act.
The proposed improved voting method is as follows:
As is common in election processes, there may be different ballot styles within a single elections process. Each of these ballot styles, as known in prior art, comprises elections data that may pertain to one or more specific voting precincts, such as candidates, offices for which said candidates vie, and legal restrictions on voting for said offices (in case of national elections), or such as questions and allowed valid answers for every question (in case of referenda).
According to the present invention, every possible voting choice that can be performed by voters is associated with a unique identifier throughout the entire voting process. Such identifier uniquely identifies every possible voting choice so that no two voting choices can have the same identifier, whether in the same or different ballots or ballot styles. Improved ballots may thus be created by printing (or otherwise making visible) the elections data onto paper or any other more wear-and-tear resistant material, as desirable. When election data are printed to create improved ballots, every voting choice (whether an election candidate/office option or referendum question/answer option) is printed alongside its established unique identifier in a way as to enable a voter to clearly understand that a relationship exists between every voting choice and its associated identifier. At the same time, in addition to the unique identifiers being visible to the voter, unique identifiers must be printed in a way as to be readable to the voting device using the scanning technology supported by the voting device.
During the voting process, thus, for every voting choice the voter wishes to make, he or she can make said choices by scanning the printed unique identifiers found on the improved ballots, which correspond to the candidates or answers he or she wishes to select or introduce. Once voting choices are made, voting data is transmitted by the voting device onto the prior art electronic voting machine in use so that the voting process can continue as required by said machine.
There are two noteworthy aspects to this:
This invention will be better understood if reference is made in the accompanying drawings in which:
10 Prior art electronic voting machine
20—Connection cable (cable that interconnects voting device and electronic voting machine)
30—Voting device (preferred embodiment)
40—Improved ballot (preferred embodiment)
50—Election choices (preferred embodiment)
60—Election data associated with election choice (preferred embodiment)
70—Unique identifier associated with election choice (preferred embodiment)
90—Scanning sensor (component of voting device)
100—Device body (component of voting device) 1
120—Activation button (optional component of voting device)
200, 210, 220, 230—Sequential steps involved in the proposed voting method
Each improved ballot 40 contains as many voting choices as required for a specific election process. In one preferred embodiment, the improved ballot is printed on regular paper using color laser jet printing technology as known to someone skilled in the art. In another preferred embodiment, the improved ballot is fixed on a more resistant material such as polycarbonate (e.g., “lexan”) using a suitable industrial printing process known to one skilled in the art. In both cases the unique identifier 70 associated with each election choice 50 is printed using the same technology as used to print election data 60 to minimize ballot production costs.
The voting device 30 is connected to the prior art EVM 10 using a standard communication media and protocol, wired or wireless. In the preferred embodiment, the voting device 30 is connected to the EVM 10 using standard serial communications means and protocol RS-232. The type of cable used to connect voting device 30 to the EVM 10 depends on the connectors found on the EVM 10 side of the connection. In the preferred embodiment the voting device 30 and EVM 10 are connected by a level-5 UTP wire using a DB-9 connector on the EVM extreme. On the voting device's side the connection is of a permanent fashion.
When a voter wishes to add a specific election choice 50 to his or her cast vote, he or she must present the voting device 30 at the unique identifier 70 of choice. The exact mode of operation shall depend on the specific technology used to position the unique identifiers 70 on the improved ballot, and on the fashion of the handheld scanning device used to implement the voting device 30. For instance, if bar coding is used, the voting device 30 must be slid across the bar code; if two-dimensional symbology is used, the voting device need be set near the symbol so that the data is read. The required mode of operation of the voting device 30 is evident to one skilled in the art.
Voting device 30 has a serial connector cable 20 on the top extreme that allows connection of the VM 30 to the electronic voting machine 10 of choice. As described above, connection cable 20 is a level-5 UTP cable using a DB-9 connector on the extreme leading to the EVM 10. In the preferred pen-like embodiment, the scanning sensor 90 is located at the tip of the voting device 30 so as to encourage the natural use of a pen to make election choices. The activation button 120 is an optional feature that may be used to activate and deactivate the scanning mechanism of the voting device 30 to prevent accidental scanning. In the preferred embodiment, the button must be depressed to activate the scanning mechanism; the same is deactivated as soon as the activation button 120 is released.
Conclusion, Ramifications and Scope of Invention
The disclosed voting device, improved ballot and voting method, including the corresponding preferred embodiments, were described in the context of national elections because such election processes are the most evident uses of the voting device, improved ballot and voting method. However, additional embodiments should be evident to one skilled in the art. For instance, the described improved ballot 40 shown in
In addition, as described above, the electronic voting machine 10 may be of any type provided a suitable communication channel (both in terms of physical connection and logical communications) can be established between the voting device 30 and the electronic voting machine 10. As the preferred embodiment of the voting device 30 comprises a serial communications link with the EVM 10, there should be no problem for someone skilled in the art to connect said voting device 30 to a standard electronic voting machine based on a PC architecture, provided a suitable off-the-shelf product is chosen to implement the voting device 30.
In an additional embodiment of the invention, the voting device 30 could have the capability to preprocess the elections data scanned of the improved ballots, so as to insert additional information that can increase security of the elections process. For instance, information about how many election choices have been made using a specific voting device could be transmitted to help auditing. Elections data could also be preprocessed by the voting pen 30 to encrypt it before transmitting it to the EVM 10.
While our above description contains many details, these should not be construed as limitations to the scope of the invention, but rather as an exemplification of one or more preferred embodiments thereof. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon a reading and understanding of this specification. The description above is intended, however, to include all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.