48865240c6
now including information that I got from Karl Fogel about E-Vote and OpenSTV's last known GPL release.
187 lines
7.5 KiB
Text
187 lines
7.5 KiB
Text
# Why This Fork of GNOME Foundation's Voting System?
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When I was setting up Conservancy's ability to run elections for its member
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projects, I surveyed various different systems. I was mostly looking for
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something that implemented STV algorithm and ballot collection for the same.
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As it turns out, there are precious few Free Software voting systems.
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* [Selectricity](http://selectricity.org/) is a good option, but upon
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discussions with the primary author, Benjamin "Mako" Hill, he confirmed
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that it does not currently implement any of the algorithms designed for
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multiple winner elections. So, if you want a preferential voting system
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with just one winner, Selectricity is probably the best choice.
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* [Fedora's election system](https://github.com/fedora-infra/elections)'s
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supports only [range voting](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Range_voting).
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* Meanwhile, for various STV algorithms,
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[OpenSTV](https://github.com/Conservatory/openstv) is the best
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choice for counting votes using various STV methods. OpenSTV is a
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command-line based system that implements all sorts of voting algorithms,
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but it has no vote-collection system. (It's also worth noting that
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openstv has since been taken proprietary, but older versions that were
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released as Free Software are still available.)
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* [E-Vote](https://github.com/mdipierro/evote) is a system focusing on the
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collection of ballots, and seems promising in its design, but it is
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relatively poorly documented and it was unclear upon initial evaluation
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if STV-style ballots were available.
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* GNOME Foundation hacked together a system in the
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[GNOME Foundation website repository](https://git.gnome.org/browse/foundation-web/)
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implemented their own little hacked-together system to collect votes for
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their annual Directorship elections.
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This project is a fork of GNOME's work, with *just* the voting stuff
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included. Most of the GNOME-isms have been removed, although a few remain.
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I've also offered patches back to the GNOME Foundation repository by
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cherry-picking changes that are of use to both projects.
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Having spent 10-20 hours poking around this PHP code, I must frankly say that
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this isn't a well-designed system, and I don't really recommend it. However,
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if you need to run a few elections, using this system, by following the
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instructions below, might be your quickest way to get an election up and
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running. (Note: the instructions herein are loosely based on
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[instructions available on the GNOME Foundation's wiki](https://wiki.gnome.org/MembershipCommittee/ElectionsHowTo),
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although those instructions are somewhat GNOME specific. I believe these
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instructions below are fully self-contained now, such that you don't have to
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read the GNOME Foundation's instructions as secondary information).
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# Setting up an election
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0. vote/include/election-sql.php expects a secret config file that exists
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only on the server and is included as PHP code. It's hard coded currently
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to: /home/admin/secret/anonvoting currently.
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The file should look something like this:
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<?php
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$mysql_host = "localhost";
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$mysql_user = "someuser";
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$mysql_password = "somepassword";
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$mysql_db = "somedb";
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$committee_name = "The Vote Masters";
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$committee_email = "elections@example.org";
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?>
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1. When I deploy, I create an account for the election, as the mysql root user:
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mysql -u root -p
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Password: <MYSQLROOTPW>
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Then Run these commands at the mysql> prompt:
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CREATE USER 'someusername' identified by 'somepassword';
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CREATE DATABASE somedbname;
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Then, exit, and at the main command line run:
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msyql -u root -p -D somedbname < ..../vote/include/schema.sql
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Then run this again:
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mysql -u root -p
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Password: <MYSQLROOTPW>
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and at the mysql command line, run these grant commands:
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GRANT SELECT on somedb.elections TO someuser@localhost;
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GRANT SELECT on somedb.election_choices TO someuser@localhost;
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GRANT SELECT,DELETE on somedb.election_tmp_tokens TO someuser@localhost;
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GRANT SELECT on somedb.election_voters TO someuser@localhost;
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GRANT SELECT,INSERT on somedb.election_anon_tokens TO someuser@localhost;
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GRANT SELECT,INSERT on somedb.election_votes TO someuser@localhost;
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2. Create an election, with something like this:
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mysql -u root -D somedb -p
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SET NAMES 'utf8';
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INSERT INTO elections (type, name, voting_start, voting_end, choices_nb, question) VALUES ("elections", "2011 Spring Election", "2011-05-29 00:00:00", "2011-06-12 23:59:59", "7", "Which candidates would you like to see Elected?");
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set @el_id = @@IDENTITY;
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INSERT INTO election_choices (election_id, choice) VALUES
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(@el_id, 'Candidate 1'),
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(@el_id, 'Candidate 2'),
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(@el_id, 'Candidate 3'),
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(@el_id, 'Candidate 4');
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INSERT INTO election_voters (election_id, email_address) VALUES
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(@el_id, 'voter1@example.org'),
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(@el_id, 'voter2@example.org'),
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(@el_id, 'voter3@example.com'),
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(@el_id, 'voter4@example.net');
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INSERT INTO election_tmp_tokens (election_id, election_voter_id, tmp_token)
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SELECT @el_id, id, SUBSTRING(MD5(RAND()) FROM 1 FOR 24) AS tmp_token
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FROM election_voters where election_id = @el_id;
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select @el_id;
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That number you see at the end is this election's id. The URL you'll
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give out is thus something like:
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http://example.org/vote.php?election_id=THAT_NUMBER
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3. Create an email template, email-template.txt, in this format:
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"Person" <person@example.org>
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A subject line describing the vote
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Dear <member>,
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Please visit: http://example.org/vote.php?election_id=THAT_NUMBER
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And use this information to complete the voting:
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E-mail:
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Vote token:
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Once you've voted, you'll be given a confirmation token. You can
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verify your own vote at:
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https://example.org/verify.php
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After the election, you can see the results at:
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https://example.org/results.php?election_id=THAT_NUMBER
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4. Prepare a list of the temp tokens sent to everyone, perhaps with this command:
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SELECT a.email_address,b.tmp_token
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FROM election_voters a, election_tmp_tokens b
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WHERE a.election_id = @el_id
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AND a.election_id = b.election_id
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AND b.election_voter_id = a.id;
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You'll need to then convert that output into a file called "voters.txt",
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with each line in a format of:
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Full Name;email_address;token
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5. Then, run this script:
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$ ./mail-instructions.py voters.txt email-template.txt
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on some server that can use SMTP from localhost.
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Note that the script will replace <member>, E-mail, and Vote token:
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strings from (3) above with the appropriate values from the voters.txt
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file.
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6. When the voting is over, download the election.blt file via this URL:
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https://example.org/blt.php?election_id=THAT_NUMBER
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then run this command:
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$ openstv-run-election -r HtmlReport ScottishSTV election.blt > output.html
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Dealing With Problems
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=====================
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## Missing Ballots
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Voters might complain that they haven't received their token. Likely, it
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either went missing or the email address was wrongly noted in the
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database. In any case, you need to find the ID of the voter With the ID do
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something like:
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SELECT * FROM election_tmp_tokens WHERE election_id = 17 AND election_voter_id = $ID;
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