Use of advanced technology will stop fraud: Colombia’s election adminstrator

(Photo: Caracol TV)

Advanced technology is to be used to reduce fraud at the upcoming presidential elections according to a report released by Colombia’s National Registry Office on Thursday.

Registrar General, Carlos Ariel Sanchez, gave a statement in which he recognized that his role is to “give people confidence in the elections,” which he plans to do by using “technological advances” which will be “more effective than “just the law.”

MORE: Colombia works to combat election fraud in 2014

technological

The results will be posted throughout the day on the Registrar’s website but will also be shared through the Google “Politics & Elections” portal. This is because the Google page is able to support “thousands of user queries simultaneously which prevents hacker attacks as information is disseminated through various sites.

Furthermore, in order to be as transparent as possible, the Registry Office will open up the source code, which is the programming behind the computer software to scrutiny.

“It will be feasible to tell if irregularities are a computer glitch or the result of hacking,” said Sanchez.

As with the congressional elections, bio-metric voter identification tools which stop multiple voting and voter impersonation will be installed at roughly 3,500 polling stations.

MORE: Colombia Congressional elections saw ‘unprecedented voter fraud and vote buying’: Electoral Observers

MORE: Facebook group claims widespread election fraud

Although congressional elections on March 9 saw low levels of violence, there were many examples of fraud which the Registry Office is working hard to eliminate for these upcoming elections.

Sources

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