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This startup wants to secure absentee voting with a blockchain
FILE- In this Nov. 8, 2016, file photo a lone voter fills out a ballot alongside a row of empty booths at a polling station in the Terrace Park Community Building on Election Day in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
FILE- In this Nov. 8, 2016, file photo a lone voter fills out a ballot alongside a row of empty booths at a polling station in the Terrace Park Community Building on Election Day in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

A Boston startup called Voatz wants to put blockchain technology to work on something more civic-minded than recording cryptocurrency transactions: voting.

The idea of using distributed-ledger systems to count ballots may seem goofy if not “abysmally stupid,” as Center for Democracy & Technology chief technologist Joseph Lorenzo Hall said in an e-mail.

But in the specific use case Voatz will test this Election Day in West Virginia—absentee voting by military personnel deployed overseas, who may not be able to count on timely mail delivery of absentee ballots—it might not be insane.

How it will work

Traditionally, voting absentee while deployed overseas has required mailing in a ballot. In this pilot, announced Sept. 20 by West Virginia Secretary of State Andrew “Mac” Warner, military absentee voters from 24 counties will be able to use Voatz’s iPhone and Android apps instead of paper mail or the more recent option of voting by fax (no, really).

As a YouTube clip explains, after registering to use this, they’ll install the app and then confirm their identity by taking a photo of their driver’s license or passport as well as a video selfie, all verified by humans.

They’ll record their ballot choices in the app, authenticate it with their fingerprint or with another selfie and then submit the vote. Voatz will record that ballot, stripped of details identifying the voter, across eight nodes running the HyperLedger blockchain framework.

Voters will get a copy of their ballot e-mailed back, while Voatz will record the vote on paper and deliver that to state officials for their count, CEO Nimit Sawhney said.

“This is a work in progress,” said Mike Queen, Warner’s deputy chief of staff, in an interview. “It’s a risk-versus-reward opportunity for a small segment of voters that right now are disenfranchised.”

He said the state expects to receive “a couple of hundred” ballots this way. “Secretary Warner is not advocating it as a mainstream way to vote,” Queen emphasized.

In an earlier test with deployed service members during May’s primary election, 13 cast Voatz ballots out of 15 who installed the app.

Taxpayer dollars aren’t paying for West Virginia’s test; instead, investor and political strategist Bradley Tusk’s foundation is underwriting it. In an e-mail, Tusk said the general-election costs should total about $150,000.

Security questions

What has techies like CDT’s Hall so irate about what he called “a distraction from real work we need to do”? It’s not just a matter of blowback to blockchain hype that grew tiresome two years ago. Critics also point to security concerns specific to voting, where there’s no “undo” button once a ballot has been cast.