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City of Bits Blog
Usability, user experience, technology, ethnography, design, the workplace, e-government and public policy, from a UK perspective


Thursday, October 28, 2004  

Ideal Government meeting

William Heath hosted an Ideal Government brainstorm last night, with a great range of participants: government, the Design Council, contractors and other private sector, and academia. The setting was the rather lovely October Gallery Club.

Some discussion revolved around user v citizen v 'consumer', and we made plain to all that user research is not all about focus groups. A major discussion issue was Ian Watmore's remit and powers.

William promises a revised version of the presentation will go up on the Ideal Government website before next week's meeting, and the blog will continue for the time being.

7:33 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Legacy
I have perhaps some 180-200 items in my Amazon basket at any given time. A horrendous thing to manage, and they don't make it any easier.

I now notice that the basket URL includes the string 'legacy-handle-buy-box'. Legacy. Hmmm. Sounds a bit ominous...

2:53 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

An election ripe for dispute?

Time's cover story this week is on the US, elections, of course. What Could Go Wrong This Time?

Creating another election ripe for dispute was hardly the intent when our elected legislators passed the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) in 2002, earmarking some $4 billion to streamline voting standards and allow states to modernize their voting systems. Although they passed the act, Congress and the White House were slow, perhaps recklessly so, in setting up the Election Assistance Commission (EAC) to implement it. So while states helped themselves to funding for new voting machines, the EAC developed no national standards for using them...

10:30 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Wednesday, October 27, 2004  

Judges are not designers - official

According to a Register report concerning a court case over voter verifiable trails for touch screen voting machines, judges do not see their role as being to opt for a better or preferable machine design:

US District Judge James Cohn [...] did acknowledge that a voter-verifiable receipt would be preferable, [but] he noted that it was his job to rule on the issue of equal protection that Wexler raised, not to evaluate the design of the ballot machines.

3:13 PM| link to this item | 0 comments


Tuesday, October 26, 2004  

No more John Peel

John Peel has died suddenly while in Peru. End of an era. Led Zeppelin, Joy Divison, the Fall, the Sex Pistols, the Clash, Althea & Donna, the Undertones...a lot of people started out with or were championed by John Peel. It was Peel that introduced me to Love Will Tear Us Apart (my best cared for and most frequently played 12", and always, I believe, in his Festive 50). I don't know if he ever played the Fall's rendition of Lost in Music, but somehow I feel he would have.

Play the John Peel Sweet Eating Game (as featured on his show), dig into the Festive 50 archives (many of which I still have on tape somewhere), or read this interview he did with Radio B92 in Belgrade, put that old Flying Saucer Attack LP on the turntable, and remember a man the like of whom we won't see again.

[I wonder whether he's bequeathed his truly massive record collection to any organisation.]

2:03 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

New Mexico voting machines hit problems

The Albuquerque Journal (New Mexico, US) carries a story about failures in voting machine user interfaces in the state, where some early voting is taking place.

Kim Griffith voted on Thursday— over and over and over.
She's among the people in Bernalillo and Sandoval counties who say they have had trouble with early voting equipment. When they have tried to vote for a particular candidate, the touch-screen system has said they voted for somebody else. [...] She went to Valle Del Norte Community Center in Albuquerque, planning to vote for John Kerry. "I pushed his name, but a green check mark appeared before President Bush's name," she said.
Griffith erased the vote by touching the check mark at Bush's name. That's how a voter can alter a touch-screen ballot.
She again tried to vote for Kerry, but the screen again said she had voted for Bush. The third time, the screen agreed that her vote should go to Kerry.
She faced the same problem repeatedly as she filled out the rest of the ballot. On one item, "I had to vote five or six times," she said.
Once again, voters themselves are being blamed for what appears to be failures in the equipment.
Bernalillo County Clerk Mary Herrera said she doesn't believe the touch-screen system has been making mistakes. It's the fault of voters, she said Thursday.
Cadigan, for example, could have "leaned his palm on the touch screen and it hit the wrong button," she said.
But as Kathy Gill (Washington University) states,
Why would any part of the screen BE active except for the checkboxes?
Clearly, they shouldn't. If depressing an electronic button just resulted in nothing being registered, that could be put down to 'screen fatigue', a physical problem with the equipment resulting from heavy use. But registering the wrong candidate is somthing else entirely...

11:04 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Monday, October 25, 2004  

Jonathan Ive

Jonathan Ive, the man behind the iMac and iPod, is this week the first speaker in a new talks series at the Design Musuem in south London. Check out the events page for details.

1:14 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

NHS IT

File on Four this week (BBC Radio 4) takes a look at the current state of the NHS IT programme.

10:37 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Friday, October 22, 2004  

Democracy Needs Good Design

I've just had an essay published by Open Democracy: Democracy Needs Good Design.

2:35 PM| link to this item | 0 comments


Thursday, October 21, 2004  

Irish rethink on voting technology

The Irish Times (subscription required) reports that Minister for the Environment, Roche, "has conceded that the electronic voting system bought for €50 million might have to be radically changed before it could be introduced in future elections".

After strong criticism of the system, which was dropped before the elections last June, Mr Roche said the Government would have to take measures to ensure the public had confidence in it before it was introduced.

The options under scrutiny included the possibility of introducing "physical add-ons" to the machines already purchased, he said.

[...]

Mr Roche said he did not know whether it would be possible to use the system in the next general election.

8:55 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Wednesday, October 20, 2004  

(US) Election nightmare scenarios

US law professor Richard Hasen considers five election nightmare scenarios in Slate:

Nightmare Scenario No. 1: Litigation Following Voting Glitch
The one lesson you would have thought everyone learned from Florida 2000 is that we need to use reliable equipment to cast ballots. After all, it was Florida's antiquated punch-card voting system—along with legal wrangling over whether and how punch-card votes should be counted—that led to the Supreme Court's decision in Bush v. Gore ending the Florida recounts and handing that election to George W. Bush.

After the election, the well-respected Caltech-MIT Voting Study found that 1.5 million votes were lost because of punch cards, and there were many other problems caused by both machinery failures and poor ballot design...

11:45 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Tuesday, October 19, 2004  

Yogi-isms

By the way, 'deja vu all over again' is, I believe, another wonderful Yogi Berra Yogi-ism, so many of which are incredibly appropriate to project management, IT etc. One of my favourites is,

"You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there."
In other words,
"If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else."
One Yogi-ism that has really proved most useful is,
"If you come to a fork in the road, take it."
It's only been the source of one regret for me: while hitching a ride in the middle of the Negev Desert, many many years ago, on being offered a car-ride to the Gaza strip, I didn't take it. And yes, I should have...

7:46 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Florida voting

There have been some voting issues in Florida in the run up to 2 November.


Few glitches reported in early Fla. voting
, Detroit News, USA

Early glitch as US votes, Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia

Voters in Florida begin casting early ballots; some problems ..., San Francisco Chronicle, CA, USA

Florida Strikes New Voting Problems, The Scotsman, UK

Problems Crop Up in Fla. Early Voting, ABC News, USA

Florida voting hits hitch early, KPVI-TV, ID, USA

Problems Reported As Voters Cast Early Ballots, Tampa Tribune, FL, USA

Problems reported as Florida voters begin casting early ballots, Tampa Bay's 10, FL, USA

Problems crop up as Florida voters begin casting early ballots, Katu.com, OR, USA

Florida voting a problem already, The Independent Journal, FL, USA

It's deja vu all over again for Florida voting officials, Baltimore Sun (subscription), USA

Many thanks to Josie Scott and Kathy Gill in the USA, both tireless workers for the Usability Professionals' Association Voting and Usability Project, for all the above.

7:20 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Editors Part II

Lovely to hear from another editor today that I'm a "bright cookie".

I think he means smart cookie - Steve White claims 'bright cookie' is a conflation of 'bright boy' and 'sharp cookie' (and I suspect the relevant collocation is in fact 'smart cookie') but what the hell, it's great to get a compliment.

A fellow editor of his remarks that perhaps only women get to be 'cookies', and I respond that we can always call those other ones of the opposite sex (bright) 'bunnies'.

I have a distinct feeling that there is a statute of limitations on cookies (how old can you be?), and probably on bunnies too. Has my cookie crumbled? Never mind. I can always enjoy Steve White's collection of Helenisms.

6:28 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

New machine

I'm just about to buy - I deliberately avoid the expression 'invest in' - another one of those things with preposterous names, obscenely large flat screens and ports for everything that probably include a lawn mower.

Yes, a new 'puter. Needs good video (for video editing), a fairish amount of hard drive, umpteen device connections (card reader?), and 802.11g enabled, of course.

I know Chris McEvoy down Bristol way has recently 'invested' in a sharpish machine from Dell.
Any other suggestions?

By the way, Chris, I've just discovered a namesake of yours. I'm assuming, of course, you are *not* the editor of National Review Online.

5:11 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Posted on Ideal Government

Posted on Ideal Government blog:

I'm going to return to the idea of process as opposed to object.

At the launch of Touching the State last week (co-produced by the Design Council and think tank IPPR) at the Houses of Parliament, someone asked whether we need to educate politicians about design. Most concurred. And, I'd add, we need to educate civil servants too. [It was a pity that Alan Milburn didn't hang around to actually listen to most of the other speakers or the questions.]

Much of the general public thinks 'design' is about the superficial, about style. It's actually about much more than that: it's the process of deciding what is going to be built or created. Design thinking can be applied to anything from a building to a computer system to a service.

The idea that we can design interactions between citizen and state is I believe an important one. At present, citizen encounters are 'designed' by government lawyers drafting acts of parliament, statutory instruments, rules etc. This may provide something that is legally watertight, but it leads to something that is all too often based on no real understanding of the citizen perspective.

What we get are a thousand badly designed encounters that are often legalistic and may well deter participation. For example, the disability charity SCOPE - which reports each year on the electoral pilots in the UK - reported this year that, "The Parliamentary Rules prescribing wording and layout of key documents [such as ballot papers and information documents] impact negatively on the accessibility of the election" and "the whole process [of postal voting] could be made simpler and more user friendly". Though this year's pilots were all-postal, most of the other channels being piloted in past and future years have been and will be electronic, and exactly the same problems arise. Moving to new technologies frequently exacerbates rather than improves encounters *unless* these encounters are well designed.

The Design Council announced last week that: "In public services, the Design Council is urging Government to dedicate 0.5% of public procurement spending to designing services around the end user. The public services debate currently centres on the scale, not the target of investment. But, if design thinking - which puts end-users' needs first - is missing then there is a high risk that services will fail the people that use them, be they teachers, nurses or members of the public."

Designing services around the end user implies conducting user research (and no, that does *not* mean focus groups).

At present, government is not about good design, it's about policy and politics, and about the 'big idea'. Policy makers pull a series of big ideas out of a hat (the 'active citizen' for example, or electronic prescribing) that seem to bear little relation to citizens' needs or wants. It's all top down. Who has defined a need for electronic prescribing (and does it really offer anything useful when you still can't get to see a GP any more quickly)? How does it help the citizen? What research has been done?

We currently have literally thousands of government websites, many of them rarely visited and badly thought out silos. The public sector is seeking to put more and more stuff into the electronic domain, but rarely thinks beyond simply making electronic that which is on paper, without considering what the new medium enables - see, for example, the dreadful Hansard online - and almost never considers the potential unintended consequences of turning brick-and-mortar encounters into electronic ones e.g. the impact on (a) election campaigning (b) accessibility (c) coercion (d) forms of democracy or (e) voter trust, (to name just a few issues) of electronic voting. Turning a poor real world encounter into a poor online one is too often the sole objective.

Government is seemingly increasingly interested in evidence-based approaches to everything... except its own initiatives. Is the Design Council's 0.5% for user-focused design asking so much?

Comments posted to that post by William Heath:

1. Very interesting. Well, if it’s 0.5% of public sector IT spend...spending £65m a year on designing e-services is better than wasting £13bn a year producing computerised government services that nobody wants to use.

I agree with the Design Council wanting to see e-services that meet people’s needs. Maybe it is, as they say, a design issue (though politicians might call it politics, managers might say it’s good management, and we might say it’s plain common sense).

Louise - do you have references to the Design council work and the people behind it?

2. Funny - I just spoke to the Design Council. It hadn’t occurred to them that what they say above is applicable to e-enabled systems - they were thinking of school classrooms and patient’s experiences in hospital. But what they say is totally applicable to e-government!

4:02 PM| link to this item | 0 comments


Monday, October 18, 2004  

Microsoft PowerPoint and the Decline of Civilisation...

...programme on BBC Radio 4.

9:52 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Saturday, October 16, 2004  

London election technology

The Greater London Authority has issued an information notice indicating plans for implementing a range of e-voting channels for the 2008 Mayoral and London Assembly elections. According to the notice, the tendering process is likely to begin in January 2005. The precise voting technologies required are "subject of policy decisions yet to be taken".

A London Assembly scrutiny committee is currently looking at the lessons learned from the 2004 elections, and is expected to report before Christmas. This follows a brief 'consultation period' - 6 September to 1 October - announced in a London Assembly press release but seemingly given little coverage elsewhere.

The government is widely expected to publish a 'road map' for future strategy on voting methods and multi-channel voting this December.

6:08 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Public sector ICT development in Canada - the lessons

From a recent article/post by Will Davies (IPPR):

The strategy used by the Canadians differs in two important respects. Firstly, it pursues quality of output, not quantity of input. One of the central targets established by D'Auray was that citizen satisfaction should increase by 10 per cent by 2005. To find ways of doing this, focus groups have been heavily used, and the CIO's Office has prioritised getting 'inside the head' of the user. The fact that this produces knock-on benefits, in terms of higher uptake of online services and consequent efficiency savings all round, remains implicit.
Michelle D'Auray was speaking about the Canadian public sector IT experience at an IPPR-organised event at the Houses of Parliament last month.

Yes, focus groups were used in the initial trawl, to uncover some ideas, but as D'Auray made clear on the day, subsequent research and design work was somewhat deeper than that, involving users and potential users (including employees) in the design process.

One of the respondents to D'Auray at the IPPR event had the bright idea that all that was needed for UK government websites was more marketing. User research was not in his vocabulary. And then they wonder - he wondered - why we have so many government websites with so few users. Focus groups - so beloved of this administration - will tell you what people tell you, not what they do.

4:20 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

File under obsessions

Many of you will know that I'm fairly obessive on the subject of voting design.

I've just had a piece on voting design published by the Design Council, in Touching The State, launched this week at the Houses of Parliament.

The invitation to contribute was I felt a great opportunity to address the issue of voting design in a reasonably non-specialised forum - rather than preaching to the converted - and the article, entitled The X Factor, focuses squarely on the issue of user- or human-centred design in the context of voting. I could have said a whole lot more, about this and other matters regarding design and the state, but there were a whole lot of other people involved in this project ranging over this terrain, from a range of disciplines, so a clear focus on UCD and voting seemed to me the best option for getting UCD onto this particular agenda.

Other contributors to this volume included:
Hilary Cottam - Design Council
Ben Rogers - Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR)
Clive Grinyer - Orange World Customer Experience (and previously Design Council)
Henrietta Moore - Professor of Social Anthropology, LSE
Deyan Sudjic - writer (The Observer etc.)
Stephen Coleman - Oxford Internet Institute
Jane Roberts - Camden Council
Colin Burns - Design Council (formerly IDEO)
Ralph Ardill - Imagination

There's been much talk recently about the next political big idea. In my view, the idea that public services and state-citizen encounters could - and should - be considered cohesive systems that can be designed based on user research, rather than cobbled together on the whim of government lawyers - just think of all those acts of parliament - and Ed Straw's generalist du jour, is about as big an idea as you can get.

A Design Council piece issued the day before the launch states:

"In public services, the Design Council is urging Government to dedicate 0.5% of public procurement spending to designing services around the end user. The public services debate currently centres on the scale, not the target of investment. But, if design thinking - which puts end-users' needs first - is missing then there is a high risk that services will fail the people that use them, be they teachers, nurses or members of the public."
I'll post the URL when the Design Council uploads the electronic version of Touching the State to their website.

3:08 PM| link to this item | 0 comments


Friday, October 15, 2004  

"Rumours on the Internets..."

Bush on those darned Internets which are clearly multiplying like the proverbial bunnies.

10:00 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Thursday, October 14, 2004  

More Google goodies

I had a quick look over someone's shoulder today at the new Google Desktop search (Beta) and it looks worth checking out.


PS It's pretty spooky the first time you see stuff on your own hard drive up there beside stuff from the Web.

9:02 PM| link to this item | 0 comments


Wednesday, October 13, 2004  

I wonder...

whether it's just me that has a strange obsession, or whether everyone is losing the ability to write correct English.

A short while ago, a copy editor - and experienced journalist - tried to add a question mark to piece I'd been commissioned to write. He tried to add it to a sentence beginnning 'I wonder...'. Today, I read a piece in The Guardian that similarly has an 'I wonder...' terminated with a question mark.

A sentence beginning 'I wonder' is not a direct question. It merely describes the question, it does not ask it. It is an indirect question and does not take a question mark.

This particular misuse of English grammar is fast beginning to aggravate me as much as the comma joining two independent sentences, the latter being a bugbear ever since the girl sitting at a neighbouring desk at school joined absolutely all her sentences with commas (she went on to become a manager at BT).

9:54 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Tuesday, October 12, 2004  

Women as canaries

Intel anthropologist Genevieve Bell gets coverage on this BBC News story about tech design and women.

Women, she muses, are like the "canary birds of the technological mineshaft". If it doesn't work for them, it'll probably fail in the mass market.

1:43 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Security, service providers and cognitive limitations

In recent weeks, I've once again come across research reporting that computer users indulge in bad behaviour like writing down their userIDs or passwords, thus exposing themselves to all manner of risks.

And just as I was starting to write this post, I called a colleague who then had trouble with his logon for getting into his electronic diary.

I'm always surprised to see people being surprised by 'writing down passwords'. "Don't write down your passwords" strikes me as a fairly loopy guideline.

I recently calculated that I have at least 100 current logons related just to public online services and websites. There are a whole lot more related to various work projects. And just to gain access to one company network or email system may entail entering ten separate data items.

There are of course no standard ways of formatting logons, and most service or site providers consider only their own needs when setting their own paramenters. Hence, some insist on an email address as a user ID while others prohibit this, some issue a user ID that cannot be changed - such as customer number, staff number, a specific email address, your name including space - and some create arbitrary rules, such as no spaces, cannot be your name, no caps, mixed case, alpha only, numeric only, no symbols, certain symbols allowed.

When we get to passwords, even more rules rear their head: must be fewer than 7 characters, must be more than 8 characters, must contain numbers, must contain numerics in certain positions, must contain a mix of alpha and numeric, cannot be a proper name, cannot be a dictionary word, cannot be a postcode, is case sensitive, is not case sensitive, must contain a mix of upper and lower case, must be changed every x days/weeks/months, must be changed on a certain day.

The trouble is, there are no logons that will serve for more than a small proportion of the many required. And when the user is forced to change one password, this inevitably does not coincide with all the other password cycles. Meanwhile, company mergers, new clients, short-term projects, and my own decisions to move or add services create even more enforced changes and additions, often on a daily basis.

The result is that logons breed faster than the proverbial rabbits. I start with three or four, and before I know it I have 100 or 120.

But as I get older, my memory for long and meaningless strings is inevitably in decline. In any case, do I really want to hold all this dross in my head? So I now have a paper file, a ready reference of services, logons and instructions, that serves for all systems and all locations (even those where I'm not permitted to take my own computer equipment). Bad practice? Maybe. But I could not function without it.

My problem, as a user, is that each and every service/system provider thinks only of themselves when designing their system. I, on the other hand, have to deal with an ever-expanding variety of system/service providers, all doing their own thing. They perhaps believe we have nothing to do but remember their logons.

The most unsafe practices I've seen are in public workspaces, such as in healthcare, where passwords are handed around or even permanently stuck to unattended computer monitors in public spaces such as hospital wards. Which makes the UK NHS plan to put so much patient data on central or networked systems a little scary.

1:00 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

US voting humour

Poor old Florida. It's been the butt of so many voting jokes. The latest is pretty similar to the ones around after the 2000 debacle, but updated for current candidates. (Thanks to Caroline Jarrett for this one.)

Mark Fiore runs through some of the issues with e-voting in his animation 1 and animation 2.

And not forgetting the Fisher-Price Voting Device, which I think I linked to last year.

11:03 AM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

The Machinery of Democracy

The Smithsonian Institute in Washington has an exhibition on voting, Vote! The Machinery of Democracy, which looks at the evolution of voting techniques and shows voting processes used in different parts of the US. Objects on show include voting machines and ballot papers, including the infamous butterfly ballot used in Palm Beach County, Florida.

You can find some material online on the SI's website. In particular, I'd highlight the display of some of the work from the Chicago-based Design for Democracy.

The exhibition runs until January 2005.

10:37 AM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

Voting issues hit the mainstream

As we approach the presidential election in the US, and with recent elections in Australia, India, Afghanistan and elsewhere, more publications are covering voting issues and voting technologies.

Over at Open Democracy, there's a new series on e-voting, kicking off with an article by Siva Vaidhyanathan comparing the US and developing country experiences.

In Experts Knock E-voting Data Delay, Wired continues its series of stories on the US elections and technology. US academics have complained that data collected in Michigan from an Internet voting exercise conducted by the Democrats back in February has not been released. How can they carry out research when they don't get the data?

Today Wired continues with Diebold and the Disabled, a piece examining the financial relationship between US disability groups and voting equipment vendors.

In the current issue of The Risks Digest, Lauren Weinstein suggests that increasingly widespread requirements for voter verified systems should put a final nail into the coffin for Internet-based voting systems.

There's coverage from bloggers too. A Livejournal post includes an image of a rogue ballot paper from a Michigan jurisdiction. The ballot - destined for optical scanning - has been printed in such a way that the scan marks do not line up with the names on the ballot paper, so a vote cast for Kerry would probably be counted as one for Bush. While this a mistake is relatively easy to spot, it highlights the issue that so-called old tech systems can be badly designed or badly executed, in the same way as newer tech ones.

9:41 AM| link to this item | 0 comments


Friday, October 01, 2004  

No One Opens Attachments Anymore

No One Opens Attachments Anymore (subtitled An International Artisans Workshop) is a marvellous title for a workshop:

November 4th & 5th 2004
InfoLab21 and Folly New Media Centre, Lancaster UK
See http://www.folly.co.uk/projects/nooattachments/index.htm
for further details.

6:14 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

E-voting in the third world

Although most media focus is on developments in the US in the run-up to the November elections, there are a few reports of what's happening elsewhere in the world.

In The Bombay Ballot in Slate this week, Eric Weiner writes at length about India's e-voting experience this year, comparing it to the US approach while making asides along the way about matters such as third world outsourcing and the US's technological chauvinism.

He concludes:

A voting system, whether Indian or American, is only as honest as the officials running it. In other words, computers don't kill elections. People do. A well-designed machine can only minimize the chances for cheating, not eliminate them.

So, we seek solace in layer upon layer of technology. The problem is that each layer creates unintended consequences, plugging one hole but creating several new ones.

For whatever reason—frugality or backwardness or desire for simplicity—India has concluded that the solution is less technology, not more. Or, as the Russians might put it: Why build a million-dollar pen when a pencil will do?
Electronic voting has also been happening in Kazakhstan. Jerzy Celichowski at the Open Society Institute in Hungary provides a link to Election progress in Kazakhstan slowed due to lack of transparency, observers report. The article addresses both paper-based and electronic systems, and suggests that introduction of e-voting has not helped:
"...last-minute decisions on parallel electronic and paper voting created confusion in many polling stations, during voting and counting. The discrepancy between the number of names on the paper and the electronic voter lists is of concern"
according to Ambassador Robert L. Barry, Head of the Long-term Observation Mission. The picture accompanying the article cycles, so you need to visit the page several times to get all the images.

4:51 PM| link to this item | 0 comments
 

E-Voting: Policies and Practice

It looks like the line-up for E-Voting: Polices and Practice, organised by IPPR and NMK (4 November), is going to be:

Jonathan Briggs, the Other media
Stephen Coleman, OII
Louise Ferguson, Digital Habitats
Jason Kitcat, SPRU
Nicole Smith, Electoral Commission

See the events calendar for further details.

4:29 PM| link to this item | 0 comments

 
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