The PANTOGRAPH Magazine Vol. V, Issue no. II

Page 44

Online Elections? Your Right and Privacy JAYVEE FORTUNO IN THE CURRENT situation where there are limitations with our access to going out of our residences, the chances of people registering for the next election is minimal compared to the years where people still have easy access to going out of their homes. According to the data gathered by the Commissions on Elections (COMELEC), the number of registrants for the next elections during the voter registration that started last September 21, 2020, was only 863,309. The said number is not even half of the expected four million people who are eligible to vote in the 2022 elections. Due to this, Gregorio Larrazabal, former commissioner of COMELEC, emphasized that the pandemic is not an excuse for eligible voters not to vote, especially that what lies within their votes is the future of the country for the next six years. Meanwhile, people have been asking how the next election will happen, with the limitations of the setup. Given that not all Filipinos have access to the internet or are allowed to go out of their homes. The Philippine General Elections, which will take place in May 2022, will provide the country with another opportunity to elect leaders who will contribute to shaping the country’s future. Senators have been debating a mail-in voting method, where it means that the votes will be cast by sending it through an email. It was proposed in light of the pandemic, with varying degrees of interest; however, the Senate President has openly rejected the plan for grounds of inclusion and safety, while two other members have expressed support for it. Regardless of whether there will be a shift to a mail-in voting system or a stick to an electronic voting system in the upcoming elections, the majority of registered voters believe that it will involve the use of electronic data processing systems, which come with their own set of cybersecurity risks. Aside from that, the fact that there are still more than three and a half billion

44 SCITECH

people, nearly half of the global population who are not yet connected to the internet, several Filipinos are part of it. Given that in the setup with the online classes where the youth and professionals are already experiencing difficulties, with them being part of the eligible voters, accessing this kind of voting system will be a struggle. Aside from the connectivity issues the whole country is experiencing, the critical factor that will hugely be affected

is the security of the voters. Cybersecurity concerns are most prevalent in two sectors of the electoral value chain. According to the United Nations and European Convention on Human Rights, voter secrecy is one of the many elements of democracy. It means that everything must be accurate and verifiable under the possible online election to ensure that the system can be trusted. With the existing doubts and concerns, two of those must be given focus. The first is the procedure of voter registration.

One example of an inherently exposed risk area is the security of voter registration databases. The data on voter registration is used to determine who is a legitimate voter and whether or not they have cast a ballot. It is vital information that, if stolen, might be used to affect voter behavior, encrypt data so that it or the database becomes inaccessible, or socially engineered voter behavior. Data privacy is a major worry for legitimate voters who have provided their personally identifiable information (PII) during the voter registration process, in addition to the data integrity issue raised by the data breach. There is also the more dangerous risk of data tampering by a hostile third party to skew election results in favor of specific politicians and parties. The actual electoral procedure is the second area of concern. Ballots filled out by registered voters are scanned by vote-counting equipment before being counted. The VCMs then aggregate all votes in election returns connected to the central and transparency servers at the end of election day. After then, the results are compiled and sent to the Boards of Canvassers at the local, provincial, and state levels. If left unprotected, the linked data networks are vulnerable to cyberattacks. Given the risks, the government may find it hard to handle and find ways on how they will manage the upcoming elections. Besides being vulnerable to hacking, online elections cannot be audited effectively given that cyber attackers could potentially delete millions of ballots. It is also why several groups of computer scientists have argued against internet voting or said that instead, it should only be used in parallel with a paper system for verification. An election is a uniquely difficult process to deliver under the pressure of high expectations, limited budgets, and a hard deadline. According to some, there is no technology yet available that can meet the challenges of delivering elections safely via the internet although, many aspects of our lives have shifted online, one thing that the current system should consider is the vulnerability of the things that could be put at risk, especially if it indicates the right and privacy of the public.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Online Elections? Your Right and Privacy

4min
page 44

Breaking Tags & History: Diaz, Petecio bag Olympic medals

4min
pages 57-58

‘No Excuses for Making ThemSuffer’: #SaveRalph Campaign Calls to Ban Animal Testing in Cosmetics

36min
pages 47-55

‘Go For It’: Forging world-class Oragon Triathletes

3min
page 56

Doctorson the Web: The Rise of Telemedicine Services amid the Pandemic

2min
page 46

Confused and Unvaccinated: Untangling the COVID-19 Vaccine Knots

4min
page 45

‘Best compromise’: Bicol doctors call for MECQ in Region as cases pass 16,000

2min
page 41

Roll Up, P-Pop!: The Future of the Filipino Music Industry

7min
pages 36-37

Beyond ‘He’ and ‘She’: Learning Your Preferred Pronouns

3min
page 35

LG-Be-Free

4min
page 34

The Campus Misfits: Asians in Racist Society

5min
pages 32-33

Creators in Action: Meet Our UNCean Vloggers

7min
pages 30-31

Quincentinary of Christianity: Growing Faith to the Present

6min
pages 28-29

Supple Bloom: Empowered UNCeanas Empowering Others

7min
pages 26-27

We Grow as They Grow: The Season of Green Sanctuaries

5min
page 25

UNC SHS CES’ ‘Project Sibol’ highlights urban gardening importance SHS students partake in ‘Project AKI’

18min
pages 21-24

65.3% UNC SHS learners satisfied with EIE SPREAD- survey

3min
page 20

UFS ‘Akda’ dominates SiLab Dos: UNO

4min
page 18

SHS Dep’t holds 1st Sem Recognition, Mother’s Day tribute

3min
page 19

‘Unity with social distancing’: City Youth Month empowers ‘Nagenyouth’

3min
page 17

2 UNC SHS alumnae sit as CYO councilors

4min
page 16

UNCeans take part in Int’l Environmental Summit 2021

2min
page 15

UNC-USG, LSB lead review of Filipina rights

3min
page 14

Amidst pandemic, academic struggles: Who is ‘outstanding stude-journo’ Lorente?

4min
page 13

‘Red-tagging not an issue’: UNC groups launch community pantries

3min
page 8

‘Character over intelligence’: Franzuela shares story behind AY Nat’l Discipline Award

3min
page 12

UNC appoints Gurnot, Sibulo as new SHS principal, assistant to principal

4min
page 10

Pantograph staffer wins 8th place in nat’l tilt SSG promotes poll awareness via ‘Project Tindog’

4min
page 7

Bicol groups use art to aid COVID-19 frontliners

2min
page 9

‘SSG officers are here for you’: Women-led SSG wins pilot online elections

3min
page 11

SHS students on 2022 polls: ‘Fix pandemic, corruption, poverty first’

4min
page 6
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.