Military Voters from 31 Countries Used Mobile App During Midterms, Warner Says

The West Virginia Secretary of State’s office has released information on the use of a mobile voting platform for overseas military voters.

The app, developed by Boston-based company Voatz, uses biometric identity verification and blockchain technology to secure the ballots. However, election and cybersecurity experts have expressed concerns about internet-facing voting systems, such as this one, being vulnerable to attack.

Of the state’s 55 counties, 24 made the app available to overseas military absentee voters in the general election pilot program.

According to a news release from the Secretary of State’s office, 144 qualified voters from 18 counties cast ballots using the mobile voting app during the general election.

State election officials say those voters were located in 31 countries across the globe.

As part of an earlier pilot program, 13 voters from two counties used the app to cast ballots from six countries in the May primary.

Secretary of State Mac Warner says an audit of the app and the mobile ballots will take two to three months.

Clio App Maps History in West Virginia, U.S.

You know those historic metal plaques that sit along West Virginia roadways and describe historic events or the stories behind small towns? Imagine the same idea — but in a digital version.

Five years ago, David Trowbridge, a history professor at Marshall University, created Clio, a digital history guide with more than 30,000 original entries from sites across the country. The app and website were recently honored by the National Humanities Alliance in Washington D.C.

Trowbridge is so passionate about this project, he started with $10,000 of his own money and continues to help fund it, with the help of donations and grants. He said he’s trying to create a “museum experience …  as if the physical place became a museum, where every building, landmark, historical marker, place where something happened is an artifact just waiting for you to explore it.”

Clio is location-based and includes a text-to-voice function that Trowbridge hopes eventually to replace with real voices. The “discover” section calls up nearby landmarks and their distance away. The app’s contributors, often from local libraries or historical societies, are crowdsourced and verified. They write short introductions for each site and longer entries with more detail.

There are also 370 walking tours on the app, 18 in West Virginia. Trowbridge specializes in African American history, and he created one tour in Huntington that celebrates the achievements of black residents and recalls their struggles there.

But what sets this app apart from Google or Wikipedia? The contributors are often locals themselves. And “you can’t Google what you don’t know you’re looking for. You can’t Google search ‘Oh, that monument I passed,'” Trowbridge said.

“This is sort of a search engine when you don’t know what you’re searching for, which brings back that magic and joy of discovery,” he added. 

The app was recognized this month by the National Humanities Alliance in Washington D.C. , as part of its Humanities for All database that lists more than 1,400 higher education humanities projects during the past decade. Clio was one of 51 innovative efforts that the alliance profiled and featured on its website.

“It’s enriching life in the university and in the community,” said Daniel Fisher, Humanities for All project director. “Including Clio was a very easy choice. It’s a marvelous project, and a wonderful gift from David Trowbridge and Marshall to the country.” 

The app and website are free to users, but it costs Trowbridge a few thousand dollars a month to maintain. It is also supported by foundations and donations, including the Whiting Foundation, Knight Foundation and National Endowment for the Humanities. Clio is part of the nonproft Clio Foundation.

Its content is strongest in cities, but through a matching grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Trowbridge will hire Marshall students to conduct research throughout West Virginia to add more sites to the app, especially in more rural areas.

 

 

Marshall University Awarded Grant for History App

Marshall University is receiving a grant to enhance an app created by an associate history professor.

The funding will help further develop the Clio app created by David Trowbridge. The app provides GPS-guided information on historical and cultural landmarks in small towns and large cities across the United States.

The university said the National Endowment for the Humanities awarded $60,000, pending a $60,000 match raised through the institution, to be granted in $20,000 installments over the next three years.

Trowbridge says Clio can notify a user about places and histories they might otherwise miss. The school says Clio is on track to have more than 6 million page views in 2017.

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