Florida County Asks Students To Crack Elections
imAck writes: "After the election fiasco last year in Florida, many have discussed the possibilities of using a computerized voting system to replace the old punch-card ballot system. Florida's Broward county is considering buying a $20 million dollar computerized touchscreen system to handle future elections. What makes the story interesting is how they are planning to test the system for security holes.
The county plans on holding mock elections in high schools and at senior citizen communities. They are actually asking the students to try and hack into the system during the mock elections to learn of possible security issues." I wonder if Broward County would look into spending their money on hardware and supporting development of the GNU Project's existing electronic voting software.
Gore graduated from Harvard with honors in 1969. George W. Bush graduated from Yale in 1968 with a GPA he said could be described as a "gentleman's C."
Al Gore enlisted and served in Vietnam through 1971. George Bush joined the Texas National Guard -- getting pushed ahead of a waiting list of about 500.
After Gore returned from Vietnam, he took graduate courses at Vanderbilt while simultaneously holding a job as a newspaper reporter. George W. Bush was AWOL from the National Guard during that same period of time.
Considering that Bush lost his home country, Gore has nothing to be ashamed of. Gore won in the cities and states with the best-educated voters. Uneducated yahoos in the bible belt preferred Bush.
Please identify another country in the world that could pick its leader in an election decided by 567 votes without having a civil war.
Most of the major courtries in Europe can barely host a soccer game without people killing each other.
[sarcasm]That's why Bush did so well in areas with the most-educated populations.[/sarcasm]
Let's look at states that have Ivy League Schools (Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, and Yale). Gore won Massachusetts (MIT and Harvard), Connecticut (Yale), Rhode Island (Brown University), New York (Columbia, Cornell), New Jersey (Princeton), and Pennsylvania (University of Pennsylvania).
Bush, on the other hand, won only a single state that had an Ivy League school -- Rhode Island (Brown). Of course Bush also carried intellectual meccas like Alabama, West Virginia, and South Carolina.