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Key Takeaways:
- Assembly Bill A7716 seeks to investigate how blockchain can protect New York’s voter rolls and election outcomes.
- The proposal highlights transparency, immutability, and public confidence in democratic processes.
- This is one of the first government attempts by an American state to incorporate blockchain into core electoral infrastructure.
A New Vision for Election Security in New York
With technology continuing to revolutionize how governments operate, New York is leading the charge in modernizing elections. Introduced by Assemblyman Clyde Vanel is Assembly Bill A7716, legislation that suggests promoting the use of blockchain technology to enhance the state’s electoral process to be more secure, transparent, and reliable.
The bill, which is currently pending in the New York State Assembly, seeks to call for a comprehensive study on the application of blockchain in voter registration, vote counting, and election result verification.
Securing the Vote: New York Bill Seeks to Modernize Election with Blockchain
The Purposes of A7716
Rather than hurrying to use blockchain in upcoming elections, the bill suggests a measured approach:
- Investigate how blockchain technology can be integrated into New York’s voting systems.
- Analyze the potential benefits and drawbacks, including security, cost, scalability, and legality.
- Provide a formal report within a year of enactment, providing legislators with actionable data.
Responding to a Climate of Distrust
The legislation is a reaction to more profound concerns regarding the instability of public trust in election facilities. Foreign tampering, disinformation, aging infrastructure, and nail-biters have all contributed to a climate in which even verified results are disputed.
By recognizing newer technology, A7716 aims to restore trust in voters with election results that cannot be disputed.
Scope and Study Parameters
If passed, the bill would require the New York State Board of Elections to work with technologists and industry experts to assess blockchain’s potential application to several priority areas:
- Voter registration systems: to prevent double voting and unauthorized tampering
- Ballot security: providing a digital, trackable record for each vote
- Result reporting: reducing delays and improving accuracy in outcome transmission
- Voter identity protection: protecting personal data within encrypted records
The ensuing report should include:
- Technical infrastructure requirements
- Security audits and threat analysis
- Implementation schedules and budgets
- Legal and regulatory concerns
- Potential pilot pilots or public tests
Such a report would be a blueprint for future legislative action, deciding whether or not to proceed with the actual rollout of blockchain technologies in election systems.
A Rising Trend in Civic Technology
Though the idea of blockchain in elections is controversial, governments across the globe are increasingly exploring its use:
- Estonia uses blockchain to make its online government services secure.
- Utah tested blockchain-based elections for overseas foreign military personnel.
- Brazil and South Korea looked at doing similar research projects.
A7716, though, is not aimed at the distant internet voting that raises security red flags with most experts. Instead, it’s aimed at using blockchain to support back-end security in an effort to modernize internal mechanisms, not replace in-person voting.
The Path Forward
awesom.The bill has made it into early stages of legislative review, including possible committee hearings and budgetary review. If the bill passes both the Assembly and Senate and is signed into law by them, the subsequent feasibility study could set the stage for a multi-year implementation plan to computerize New York’s elections.