Voting History vs Personal Privacy

According to the California Voter Foundation, the chief purposes of voter registration are to both prevent voter fraud and to facilitate election administration. An equally important but less well-known purpose is to provide political campaigns with contact and personal information about voters and their history of election participation.

One way campaigns ensure that their message reaches the most desirable of voters is to know who those voters are in the first place. Voter lists are comprised largely of personal information supplied by voters when they filled out their voter registration forms. The most common types of information collected on voter registration forms include name, address, signature, date of birth, phone number, gender, party affiliation, and all or part of the voter’s Social Security number. For the record, voters who are concerned about identity theft will be relieved to know that Social Security numbers are removed from voter lists before distribution in every state where they are collected.

Voter registration forms are processed by local election agencies, who input the data from the forms into voter lists. Voter lists are public record because they are government documents created by government agencies. If a state’s laws do not explicitly permit the redistribution of voter lists, public records laws have been widely utilized as justification for redistribution to secondary users.

Before computerization, voter lists were protected to some degree by the notion of practical obscurity because such lists were available only on paper. Now that voter lists are widely available in a computerized format, they are also easy to duplicate, transfer and utilize in connection with other lists and databases. On the one hand, a person’s voter registration record is by tradition and law a public record because all citizens have an interest in ensuring the legitimacy of all voters and the integrity of the electoral system. On the other hand, widespread access to personal voter data can jeopardize a voter’s privacy and safety.

Every state allows its voter registration data to be used for political purposes, which typically include sending campaign mail, precinct-walking and phone banking. Political campaigns and parties are the most common secondary users of voter registration data. Campaigns typically obtain voter data by either purchasing it directly from their state or local elections offices, acquiring it from their political party, or buying it from political data vendors. Forty-three states use voter lists as a juror source list. State legislatures are required to draw new districts every ten years to ensure that legislative districts within a state have a relatively equal numbers of residents, and they often use voter registration data for the redistricting process. Other governmental agencies, such as tax authorities, law enforcement, and state employment agencies, may also use voter registration data to locate citizens.

A campaign can now easily find out how many Democrats with Latino surnames who voted in the primary and don’t have a Republican in the household are in any given precinct. In the process of precisely targeting who they want to reach, campaigns are skilled at ignoring those they are not interested in reaching — primarily nonvoters and infrequent voters — savings millions of dollars of public funding.

In California, the use of voter registration information for commercial purposes is a misdemeanor. While the cost entry level to obtain a statewide voter list is low, only about $30, the penalty for abuse is substantial, a fine of $0.50 per name on the list. With 15 million registered users in California, the potential fine is a whopping $7.5 million — assuming the offender is caught. As a less-than-adequate protection, states often seed the voter list with decoy names that work as a tracking device.

Overall, states are gathering more data from voters than may be necessary for elections administration. Sensitive data, such as voters’ birthplaces and exact dates of birth, should be removed from voter lists. All states that collect Social Security numbers should comply with the Federal Privacy Act and notify voters of the reason for collecting this data. Voter registration forms should explain which fields are optional and which ones are required. The standards that have come to codify the handling of personal information in Internet and other commercial transactions should apply to voter registration data, including allowing voters to change their preferences for whom they permit to use their data and how they want to be contacted, or if they want to be contacted at all.

In the meantime, I plan to re-register to vote, supplying only the minimum information required. If nothing else, maybe it will stem the flow of political advertisements.



You Know You’re Too Much Into Harry Potter When…

  • You wave your pen around and repeat “wingardium leviOHsa” to various inanimate objects
  • You talk in low hisses to snakes
  • You want to buy a train and name it the Hogwarts Express
  • You glue a compass to the dashboard of your car and try to get the car to fly
  • You try to make polyjuice potion
  • You get a diary and never write in it
  • You believe that you know more about Harry Potter than J.K. Rowling does
  • You see a murderer holding a knife in a movie and you shout out “Expelliarmus!”
  • You try to make your chess pieces move and talk
  • You draw a lightning scar on your forehead
  • You start sleeping in the cupboard under the stairs
  • You are absolutely certain that your letter from Hogwarts is lost in the mail and that it will arrive any day now
  • You travel into forests looking for injured unicorns
  • You wish ESPN would show Quidditch
  • You wish your dog would grow 2 more heads
  • You had to go to the hospital after breaking your nose running headfirst into the wall between platforms nine and ten
  • You name your first child Harry or Hermione
  • On Halloween you give little trick or treaters dressed up as Harry Potter characters more candy than the other ones
  • You look at the local community college’s curriculum for courses on Transfiguration and Defense Against the Dark Arts
  • You buy a rat, name him Peter, and put a sign on the cage that reads “Azkaban”
  • You own a white owl
  • You always write out Harry Potter instead of just HP
  • HP doesn’t mean just Hewlett-Packard anymore
  • You check daily to see if Moaning Myrtle has moved into your toilet
  • You commission signmakers in England to create a Platform 9 3/4 sign for your wall (*ahem*)
  • You add Hogwarts and Quidditch to your spell checker
  • You create a list like this…

10 Things NOT to do While Watching The Return of the King

  1. Stand up halfway through the movie and yell loudly, “Where the hëll is Harry Potter?”
  2. Block the entrance to the theater while screaming: “YOU SHALL NOT PASS!”
  3. Play a drinking game where you have to take a sip every time someone says: “The Ring.”
  4. Ask everyone around you if they think Gandalf went to Hogwarts.
  5. Talk like Gollum all through the movie. At the end, bite off someone’s finger and fall down the stairs.
  6. In The Two Towers when the Ents decide to march to war, stand up and shout “RUN FOREST, RUN!”
  7. Imitate what you think a conversation between Gollum, Dobby and Yoda would be like.
  8. Release a jar of daddy-long-legs into the theater during the Shelob scene.
  9. Wonder out loud if Aragorn is going to run for governor of California.
  10. Dress up as old ladies and reenact “The Battle of Helms Deep” Monty Python style.