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While you may already be familiar with how to vote in an automated election, there
are a few technical problems that can occur before your vote gets counted and
transmitted. This interactive guide to the May 2010 elections illustrates what can go
wrong, what COMELEC has done, and what you can do to prevent further problems.
Many of these potential problems can be prevented by vigilance and your
cooperation. Do your part to keep our elections clean by educating yourself about
the voting process and keeping an eye out for any suspicious activity.
Step 1: Go to your respective precinct, fill out your ballot, and feed it to the
Precinct Count Optical Scan (PCOS) Machine.
• What you can do: Prepare your list of candidates and bring a cheat
sheet. This will help you shade the ovals as fast as you can to give way to
other voters. Consider bringing extra felt tip pens and lending them to
other voters.
• What can go wrong: Each precinct may serve up to 1,000 voters - expect
long lines.
• What COMELEC says: COMELEC will extend voting day until midnight if
necessary.
• What you can do: To avoid standing in line for hours, go to your precinct
early. All precincts will be open from 7 am until 6 pm.
• What you can do: Bring flashlights so you can accomplish your ballot in the
dark. If a machine is not working, alert the BEI and PPCRV volunteers.
• What you can do: Make sure your ballot is neat and free of folds or
crumples. If the machine spits out your ballot, insert it a second time. If the
PCOS still rejects the ballot, return the ballot to the BEI Chairman.
• What can go wrong: Despite keeping your ballot clean and straight, the
machine jams. This time, it’s the machine’s fault.
• What COMELEC says: There are 6,380 spare PCOS machines that can be
used if a unit is not working.
• What you can do: Hold on to your ballot and report the error to the BEI.
• What COMELEC says: Testing and sealing of the PCOS machine will be
done at least three days before election day to ensure that it will not be
tampered.
• What you can do: Take part in the testing and sealing procedures to make
sure that no pre-marked ballots are entered. Help secure the polling places
where the machines are installed.
Voter feeds ballot into the PCOS Machine
• What you can do: Make sure not to write anything on the security marks.
Shade the ovals fully and double-check to see if you selected the right
number of candidates per position. Again, it helps to bring a cheat sheet to
avoid these mistakes.
Step 2: Once your ballot has been accepted, the PCOS machine scans the ballot.
• What can go wrong: The PCOS machine may not read the voter’s choices
correctly; it only gives a confirmation message that the voter’s ballet has
been accepted. COMELEC has disabled the feature that will verify that the
machine has interpreted the voter’s choice correctly, violating Art. 7 of
RA9369.
• What you can do: You can join others in pressuring the COMELEC to enable
the verification feature of the machine to ensure the transparency of the
voting process. On election day, make sure you see the confirmation
message on the PCOS screen before leaving the polling station.
Step 3: As soon as the PCOS machine is done scanning the ballots, the BEI will
close the polls to prevent additional ballots from being inserted
• What you can do: Stay behind to watch and make sure that no other ballots
are being fed into the machine
• What can go wrong: If there is a 100% voter turnout, the PCOS machine
may not be able to hold all 1,000 paper ballots.
• What COMELEC says: COMELEC says that all ballots will fit into the unit, but
this claim has not yet been tested.
• What you can do: Make sure that all ballots are intact and that the PCOS
machines are not opened at any time.
• What can go wrong: At the beginning of election day, the PCOS machine
should show a zero report. Instead, the machine prints a summary that shows
the total number of votes of each candidate.
• What COMELEC says: Two or three days before the elections, every single
PCOS machine will be calibrated. There is no way for a zero report to not get
printed on election day.
• What you can do: If the PCOS machine does not print a zero report, poll
watchers should contact the BEI and ask for a new machine. This will prevent
the possible rigging of votes.
• What you can do: Examine the printed election returns (ER) posted in the
precinct to see if the voter turnout and number of votes match. Alert the poll
watchers and the media if you spot any discrepancies.
• What can go wrong: The machine does not print copies of the ER. Ideally, it
should print 8 copies of the ER before the transmission and 22 more copies
afterwards. There should be a total of 30 ER copies.
• What COMELEC says: Each PCOS unit has a compact flash (CF) card where
the images of the scanned ballots and voting results are stored. If this
happens, the CF card can be easily removed and inserted in another PCOS
machine, which will then print the ERs.
• What you can do: If this happens, follow the BEI and keep your eye on the
CF card to prevent any switching. Make sure the ERs are printed properly.
Step 5: After the ballots are counted and ERs are successfully printed, the election
officer will insert a transmission cable onto the machine. The PCOS unit
electronically transmits the results to the municipal board of canvassers, the central
server, and servers for political parties, KBP, and PPCRV.
• What can go wrong: Poor signal or no signal, preventing the unit from
sending the results.
• What COMELEC says: The BEI can find a better satellite signal or change
the SIM cards. If this does not work, the BEI will take the CF card of the unit
and go to the nearest precinct. A functioning PCOS will then be used to
transmit the results.
• What you can do: Follow the BEI and keep your eye on the CF card to
prevent any switching. If the PCOS unit is being transported, make sure
nobody removes the ballots from the machine.
• What COMELEC says: The CCS of another municipality or city can be used.
• What you can do: Accompany the transfer to the nearest municipality and
monitor the canvassing to prevent any anomalies.
• What can go wrong: The secret keys used by the board of canvassers to
sign COCs and Statements of Votes may be stolen or copied.
• What COMELEC says: The keys are encrypted for security and kept under
COMELEC’s control. However, the security of the keys have not been tested
by a third party IT consultant.
• What you can do: Join others and pressure the COMELEC to have the source
code reviewed by independent IT experts, as per the legal requirement.
• What you can do: You can ask the city board of canvassers or the
municipality to hook up an LCD projector onto the CCS laptop. This will allow
the results to be projected on a wall or screen for everyone to see.
Step 7: The results from cities and municipalities are consolidated by the Provincial
Board of Canvassers. These are then transmitted to the National Board of
Canvassers. Once the results are counted, COMELEC can declare winners at the
provincial level.
• What can go wrong: Due to a software and hardware failure, the Board of
Canvassers is unable to consolidate the results and print out COCs.
• What COMELEC says: As in the municipal level, the CCS of the nearest
province can be used. The central COMELEC server can also do back-up
canvassing.
• What you can do: Accompany the transfer and monitor the transmission of
results.
From here, the results will be transferred to the National Board of Canvassers. The
latter will then consolidate the results and declare the winners for national
positions.
Source- http://www.thepoc.net/automated-elections/5628-how-to-resolve-potential-
problems-in-the-automated-elections.html