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Here it is folks: The small government republican answer to fix the .00001% crime of double voting:
Q: You're going to take a photo of every singe person in the country voting?
RKMBROWN: Yes, on small client devices, we'll store low res photos of the person and their signature, and a scan of their information from the voter id card.
Q: An instant computer cross check of every polling place in the country before someone votes?
RKMBROWN: Yes, the information from the ID cards will already be previously stored. A "flag" indicating the user voted in said elections will be "incremented" one time for each vote. If the counter is incremented more then once an alert will be generated from the database engine where the counter is located. When the alert is generated the client devices holding the photos will be notified to hold said photos for evidence and also to alert the holder of the client devices, aka. election officials.
We'll use federal government storage facilities, for the cross index database. Since the database is just a small two bit counter for a plurality of keys for voters it will be fairly small. I'll create a hashing index for the keys that maps to the counter bits. I'll separate the bits into hash buckets managed by say a hundred servers running in a grid. As the votes come in they will be quickly routed to the correct server to update the counter for it's bucket. The votes will be queued up and processed in batches. Since the amount of data is small I can keep it all in memory on the servers. I would shoot for an expected delay for alerts to go out within 30 seconds of the voter signing in.
^ There you have it folks. Hundreds of thousands of polling places all across the country, snapping your picture each time you vote, feeding it all into a federal database which is tracking where you were within seconds.
Awesome! On a stick!
Q: You're going to take a photo of every singe person in the country voting?
RKMBROWN: Yes, on small client devices, we'll store low res photos of the person and their signature, and a scan of their information from the voter id card.
Q: An instant computer cross check of every polling place in the country before someone votes?
RKMBROWN: Yes, the information from the ID cards will already be previously stored. A "flag" indicating the user voted in said elections will be "incremented" one time for each vote. If the counter is incremented more then once an alert will be generated from the database engine where the counter is located. When the alert is generated the client devices holding the photos will be notified to hold said photos for evidence and also to alert the holder of the client devices, aka. election officials.
We'll use federal government storage facilities, for the cross index database. Since the database is just a small two bit counter for a plurality of keys for voters it will be fairly small. I'll create a hashing index for the keys that maps to the counter bits. I'll separate the bits into hash buckets managed by say a hundred servers running in a grid. As the votes come in they will be quickly routed to the correct server to update the counter for it's bucket. The votes will be queued up and processed in batches. Since the amount of data is small I can keep it all in memory on the servers. I would shoot for an expected delay for alerts to go out within 30 seconds of the voter signing in.
^ There you have it folks. Hundreds of thousands of polling places all across the country, snapping your picture each time you vote, feeding it all into a federal database which is tracking where you were within seconds.
Awesome! On a stick!