Dubai Telegraph - Digital voting breeds distrust among overseas Filipino workers

EUR -
AED 4.27928
AFN 72.830397
ALL 95.473946
AMD 429.710635
ANG 2.086283
AOA 1069.6737
ARS 1621.711681
AUD 1.620051
AWG 2.100313
AZN 1.981292
BAM 1.946715
BBD 2.357657
BDT 143.061731
BGN 1.945827
BHD 0.44148
BIF 3485.108757
BMD 1.165222
BND 1.490519
BOB 8.053312
BRL 5.833109
BSD 1.170581
BTN 111.669453
BWP 16.487501
BYN 3.270408
BYR 22838.351572
BZD 2.354258
CAD 1.600951
CDF 2615.923177
CHF 0.914752
CLF 0.026467
CLP 1041.685501
CNY 7.906143
CNH 7.92055
COP 4415.86519
CRC 531.954833
CUC 1.165222
CUP 30.878384
CVE 110.425363
CZK 24.318242
DJF 208.443117
DKK 7.473059
DOP 69.381066
DZD 154.111905
EGP 61.626294
ERN 17.47833
ETB 182.772723
FJD 2.55877
FKP 0.861904
GBP 0.871161
GEL 3.122885
GGP 0.861904
GHS 13.294634
GIP 0.861904
GMD 84.4706
GNF 10264.198971
GTQ 8.891504
GYD 243.818981
HKD 9.125419
HNL 31.130505
HRK 7.532692
HTG 153.284881
HUF 359.105692
IDR 20479.184811
ILS 3.382175
IMP 0.861904
INR 111.718516
IQD 1526.440845
IRR 1532266.955489
ISK 143.60179
JEP 0.861904
JMD 185.079493
JOD 0.826149
JPY 184.70225
KES 150.605099
KGS 101.898821
KHR 4696.617559
KMF 491.723396
KPW 1048.66563
KRW 1745.654305
KWD 0.359506
KYD 0.971263
KZT 551.673027
LAK 25582.449105
LBP 104331.669901
LKR 379.070912
LRD 213.527012
LSL 19.214134
LTL 3.440597
LVL 0.704831
LYD 7.429972
MAD 10.730238
MDL 20.121509
MGA 4902.662098
MKD 61.636379
MMK 2446.809006
MNT 4171.646561
MOP 9.402598
MRU 46.776235
MUR 54.645266
MVR 17.94104
MWK 2029.346205
MXN 20.111272
MYR 4.59622
MZN 74.469317
NAD 19.214235
NGN 1595.387557
NIO 43.078244
NOK 10.824097
NPR 179.460027
NZD 1.97973
OMR 0.448027
PAB 1.165436
PEN 4.016559
PGK 5.099608
PHP 71.831306
PKR 326.029029
PLN 4.247006
PYG 7133.053439
QAR 4.247816
RON 5.200963
RSD 117.395846
RUB 85.352884
RWF 1712.132771
SAR 4.374416
SBD 9.340579
SCR 15.914979
SDG 699.71378
SEK 10.976823
SGD 1.488292
SHP 0.869956
SLE 28.723019
SLL 24434.12558
SOS 669.01743
SRD 43.35443
STD 24117.743219
STN 24.493316
SVC 10.197148
SYP 128.790513
SZL 19.20076
THB 37.848763
TJS 10.890833
TMT 4.078277
TND 3.365208
TOP 2.805575
TRY 53.066072
TTD 7.912868
TWD 36.732577
TZS 3023.751425
UAH 51.460657
UGX 4358.546858
USD 1.165222
UYU 46.412204
UZS 14035.099706
VES 594.436632
VND 30690.200147
VUV 137.586688
WST 3.156028
XAF 655.778043
XAG 0.014295
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.149071
XCG 2.100389
XDR 0.815577
XOF 655.778043
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.079904
ZAR 19.262868
ZMK 10488.39105
ZMW 22.035987
ZWL 375.201015
  • RBGPF

    0.8900

    61.68

    +1.44%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    15.9

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    0.0898

    23.14

    +0.39%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.96

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    24.19

    -0.83%

  • RIO

    -2.4500

    109.59

    -2.24%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    66.7

    +2.02%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    44.12

    -0.05%

  • AZN

    -2.7600

    184.96

    -1.49%

  • NGG

    0.4500

    87.43

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.48

    -0.19%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.6

    +0.17%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    2.4200

    69.4

    +3.49%

  • RELX

    -0.1600

    31.46

    -0.51%

Digital voting breeds distrust among overseas Filipino workers
Digital voting breeds distrust among overseas Filipino workers / Photo: Purple ROMERO - AFP

Digital voting breeds distrust among overseas Filipino workers

A new online voting system aimed at boosting turnout among the Philippines' millions of overseas workers ahead of Monday's mid-term elections has been marked by confusion and fears of disenfranchisement.

Text size:

Thousands of overseas Filipino workers, or OFWs, have already cast their ballots in the race dominated by a bitter feud between President Ferdinand Marcos and his impeached vice president Sara Duterte.

While official turnout figures are not yet publicly available, data from the Commission on Elections (Comelec) show at least 134,000 of the 1.22 million registered overseas voters have signed up for the new online system, which opened April 13.

But Jun Burlasa III, a Filipino working in Singapore, says he will not vote again if he has to do it online.

"I'd rather do manual," the 50-year-old told AFP this week, describing the new system as "confusing and suspicious".

At issue is a digital QR code generated after voting that leads users to a page asking them to verify their ballot has been submitted correctly. Below that is a box containing a jumble of computer code and candidate names.

Burlasa said many of the names visible were candidates for whom he had not voted.

Similar stories about the anxiety-inducing webpage have proliferated across social media, including Facebook posts that have reached thousands.

Eman Villanueva, a Hong Kong-based activist with migrant rights group BAYAN, said he was unsure his vote had been properly counted.

"There is absolutely no way for the voters to know if the votes that went through really reflected our choices," he said.

In previous overseas elections, voters could review the names they selected after the fact, but Comelec told AFP the QR code was never supposed to serve that purpose.

The landing page was only intended to verify a ballot's receipt, the commission said, adding that the name of every candidate running in the election should appear.

"We are definitely considering the feedback and studying how to incorporate them in future elections," Ian Geonanga, Comelec's director of overseas voting, told AFP.

Election watchdogs, however, say the commission failed to properly explain the new system and warn of the confusion risks disenfranchising voters.

"It's a natural reaction of people that if you're not familiar with the system, then you won't trust it the first instance," said Ona Caritos, executive director of the nonprofit Legal Network for Truthful Elections (Lente).

- ChatGPT, disinfo and 2028 -

Since April 14, 1.5 million people have watched a video in which a Philippines-based engineer named Jaydee San Juan quizzes ChatGPT about the names visible on the ballot verification page.

"It's highly likely showing the candidates that were selected/voted for using that ballot ID," the AI chatbot replied.

Comelec, however, got the opposite answer when conducting the ChatGPT experiment itself, Geonanga told AFP.

The election commission's efforts to quell fears about the new system, meanwhile, have been misrepresented to sow more disinformation.

AFP fact-checkers recently debunked a video edited to make it appear Geonanga was saying online ballots were "designed" to rig the election's results.

The fiasco has also left election watchdogs and migrant groups sceptical that the switch to online voting will boost turnout as intended.

Danilo Arao, convenor of voting watchdog Kontra Daya, said even a small change to the ballot's design might have helped assuage fears he believes could lead to "widespread disenfranchisement".

Lente's Caritos said losing trust in the online voting system could impact OFWs' participation in the 2028 presidential election.

“We don't want that, because if election results are not trusted by our voters, then it would go into the legitimacy of the government," she said. "It's a domino effect."

I.Viswanathan--DT