Open Source Digital Voting Foundation

The Open Source Digital Voting Foundation (OSDV) is a California-based, United States (pending) Public Benefit Corporation. It was founded in November 2006 and incorporated in April 2007 in an effort to address issues surrounding US e-voting technology. The purpose of the OSDV is to create voting systems that are accurate, transparent, verifiable, and secure.

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Overview

The OSDV operates as a non-profit organization for the purposes of advancing open-source designs and specifications; any software or hardware that it creates is free.

The work of the Foundation is done through a volunteer community including system and software developers, an outreach team, and experts in electronic voting technology and trustworthy computing.

The OSDV Foundation's application (IRS Form 1023) for tax-exempt status pursuant to section 501(c)(3) of the US internal revenue code is pending with the IRS as of January 2011.

Goals

Additionally, the foundation aims to restore trust[1] in the processes of US elections. To this end, the OSDV is engaged in two related activities:

  1. Proposed standards: developing technology guidelines and other tools to aid in the development, evaluation, and use of computing technology in conducting elections; using real systems and real voting procedures to demonstrate the use of these guidelines and tools to show how high-assurance computing can be used as part of a high-confidence election process.
  2. Working prototypes: developing a demonstration test-bed of digital voting systems and services built on these guidelines, freely available for education and research purposes and suitable for mock or real polling.

History

The OSDV Foundation was founded in 2007 by E. John Sebes and Gregory Miller[2], with the purpose of resolving the challenges of electronic voting technology.

The major issue that concerned both founders was the lack of trust in the process of voting and election results[3].

The OSDV asserts that, for elections to retain real meaning, confidence must be restored in the systems for conducting voting; those systems must accurately capture the decision of the voter. As a result, the OSDV Foundation's projects are based on an open source system, which invites anyone to participate in design, development, review and testing.

The OSDV Foundation's first project is TrustTheVote.

References

  1. ^ [1], To Assure Pride and Confidence in the Electoral Process, Report of the National Commission on Federal Election Reform, Jimmy Carter, Gerald R. Ford, Lloyd N. Cutler, Robert H. Michel, Publisher Brookings, 2002
  2. ^ [2], Palo Alto Weekly Online, March 19, 2010
  3. ^ [3], California Secretary of State, Top-to-Bottom Review Summary, May 9, 2007

External links