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Doubting Electronic Voting

twitter writes "The NYT is raising the alarm on electronic voting. After citing expert opinion on the need for a paper trail, they then quote election officials and vendors who dismiss that opinion as the ignorant work of dreamers. The reporter titles his article, 'To Register Doubts, Press Here' and seems less than convinced."

440 comments

  1. Free mirror by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 4, Informative
    No reg, wheeeee....

    The article

    Bon appetit.

    1. Re:Free mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      For those of you who read french, check out these pages:

      http://www.ge.ch/chancellerie/e-government/e-vot in g.html

      You will discover, that in some less meticulous countries, e-voting has already been a reality.

      Thanks also to HP, which has earned a lot of taxpayers money for developing a closed-source voting system never to be used at a larger scale than a 1'000 soul commune....

    2. Re:Free mirror by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      You will discover, that in some less meticulous countries, e-voting has already been a reality.
      La Suisse, moins méticuleuse que les Tas-Unis??? Êtes-vous déjà au moins allé aux Tas-Unis???
    3. Re:Free mirror by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      yeah and in a few of those countries the voting system is mot corupt becasue of it

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    4. Re:Free mirror by buffer-overflowed · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's not French, it's freedom. Geez, don't you pay attention...

      s/French/freedom/g

      IE: Do you speak freedom?
      I took freedom in high school.
      Would you like some freedom toast?

      --
      The key to the enjoyment of pop music is to replace any instance of "love" with "C.H.U.D."
    5. Re:Free mirror by js7a · · Score: 1

      News articles, especially those about government, are always subject to fair use exemptions. Have people forgotten that?

      I want to preface this with my views that typical future poling stations will be comprised of a touch screen with a printer, and an optical scan machine, which can scan the ballots produced by the printer. That way, the people who can't mark the ballot can use touch screen, and everyone else can do what Cambridge, Mass. does with Instant Runoff Voting (IRV) and also be able to use the mail.

      May 15, 2003

      To Register Doubts, Press Here
      By SAM LUBELL

      FTER the 2000 presidential election, with its disputes over the balloting in Florida and its hanging chad, the federal government moved swiftly to revamp the country's largely paper-based and mechanical voting systems. More than $1 billion has been appropriated for buying electronic voting systems, including optical scanners and touch-screen machines, that eliminate ballots written or punched on paper or tallied by mechanical equipment.

      The new systems have already brought what proponents of electronic voting say is a new reliability and efficiency to the process.

      "There's no guesswork as far as who you voted for," said Mark Radke, director of voting industry for Diebold Election Systems, which makes the AccuVote-TS, a $3,000 touch-screen machine. Mr. Radke said the unit, which presents voters with choices on an electronic monitor, quickened the voting and counting process and reduced the number of "undervotes," ballots that are not counted because they are unreadable or otherwise defective.

      But not everyone likes the switch to electronic balloting. Some of the loudest opposition, in fact, is coming from computer experts who say the new technology could prove more troublesome than its predecessors. They warn of equipment malfunction, unchecked tampering and the lack of secure proof for each vote.

      A group of more than 100 technologists, led by David Dill, a professor of computer science at Stanford University, has called for tighter security measures on electronic voting apparatus and a "voter-verifiable audit trail," meaning a permanent record of each vote that can be checked for accuracy even after the election. (The group's "resolution on electronic voting" is at verify.stanford.edu/evote.html.)

      Without such a trail, Dr. Dill warned, if a machine is tampered with or malfunctions, "then the votes in question are corrupted and you have no option but to hold another election or accept bad results." Thus the only reliable backup, the group contends, is for the machines to print out paper ballots after each vote, which can be hand-counted if necessary.

      Dr. Dill and his counterparts, who in- clude computer science experts in academia and Silicon Valley, also assert that unlike more mechanical machines, electronic systems cannot be opened up to the public for verification. And the only people who know what is encoded on them are computer experts. "I think it's unreasonable for the public to be asked to accept the security of these machines on blind faith," he said. "There's no question the technology is open to tampering."

      Members of the group also assert that electronic voting machines have experienced breakdowns in some elections. "We're concerned," said Rebecca Mercuri, formerly a professor of computer science at Bryn Mawr and now the president of Notable Software, a consulting firm. "These machines are showing huge defects."

      For their part, election officials and voting machine vendors dispute any notion that the systems have major problems, and caution that the public should not overreact.

      Penelope Bonsall, director of the Federal Election Commission's Office of Election Administration, which helps set guidelines for the voting process, said that the possibility of vote tampering has always exi

  2. How will that work? by grub · · Score: 0, Funny


    Will random people get hanging chad cookies in their browsers?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  3. Right..... and all financial transactions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So perhaps they've never heard of printouts?

    My bank doesn't seem to have a problem with me transferring thousands of dollars electronically, but this reporter is nervous about voting?

  4. Yeah right by Ishin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We all saw what good a paper trail did in Florida in the 2000 USA presidential campaign. The problems run much deeper than just a paper trail in the USA. When people are cut off from voting by police roadblocks, and thousands of ballots are thrown away, or arranged in a confusing way to try to get people to vote for someone that they don't want to, there's more than just a paper trail problem.

    Unfortunately, the US government runs its own elections, rather than a truely impartial third party.

    Politics are a dangerous thing in America.

    1. Re:Yeah right by PhxBlue · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you think politics in the United States is dangerous, check out the political situations in places like Ivory Coast. At least American citizens survive the voting process.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    2. Re:Yeah right by Ishin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The main difference seems to actually just be that when someone disappears in the US of A no one knows what happened to them. Being a dissident in any country is dangerous. No less so since the new witch trials began. (all this terrorism stuff) And it gets more dangerously legal everyday with guys like Ashcroft at the country's 'justice' helm.

    3. Re:Yeah right by Dr.+Bent · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unfortunately, the US government runs its own elections, rather than a truely impartial third party.

      "a truely impartial third party"? Like who? What organization is responsible enough to oversee the elections of the most powerful nation on Earth and yet has no opinion one way or another on how they should go.

      There is no "impartial third party". The U.S. electoral process isn't perfect but handing it over to Deloitte and Touche, or the U.N. or any other supposedly 'impartial' body is just going to make it worse. The best way to keep it legit is just to make the counters accountable.

    4. Re:Yeah right by grub · · Score: 1


      ..dangerously legal everyday with guys like Ashcroft at the country's 'justice' helm.

      Not to worry. In the long run the history books will treat Ashcroft, Rumsfeld and Bush Jr. with the same disgust they do Joe McCarthy today.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    5. Re:Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Local state governments run elections not the US government.

    6. Re:Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard that those things happened. Can you provide links or news paper citations (with dates)?

    7. Re:Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My preference would be the UN, but its not very popular in the USA...

      How about pairing off with another country as a compromise? e.g., the USA and the UK oversees each other's elections.

    8. Re:Yeah right by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 2, Funny

      "a truely impartial third party"? Like who? What organization is responsible enough to oversee the elections of the most powerful nation on Earth and yet has no opinion one way or another on how they should go.

      The Stonecutters? Uh, wait, never mind...

    9. Re: Yeah right by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Interesting


      > We all saw what good a paper trail did in Florida in the 2000 USA presidential campaign.

      The sad thing about the 2000 Florida vote is that the problem was thoroughly preventable. The same problem showed up in the previous election and an investigative commission determined that the way to fix it was to switch to a different kind of voting machine without the established history of problems.

      Unfortunately, public officials didn't think getting those people's votes was important enough for the money it would have cost to replace the machines, and the rest is history.

      > The problems run much deeper than just a paper trail in the USA. When people are cut off from voting by police roadblocks, and thousands of ballots are thrown away, or arranged in a confusing way to try to get people to vote for someone that they don't want to, there's more than just a paper trail problem.

      Yeah, and that bit of silliness going on in Texas right now is all about gerrymandering. Lots of politicians simply aren't interested in the electorate's will, which is why closed systems such as the electronic voting machines everyone is rushing of to buy are a completely intolerable solution.

      Where corruption is possible, corruption will be found. We need to demand as much opportunity for oversight as technology will allow, and paper trails are the least we can do.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good God, not thank you. Here in the U.K we can actually manage to run an election; we don't need the U.S.A screwing it up for us.

      What is it with the U.S and its fascination for all these different voting machines, anyway? Put a cross on a peice of paper and stick it in a locked box. Its easy!

    11. Re:Yeah right by DickBreath · · Score: 4, Funny

      "a truely impartial third party"? Like who? What organization is responsible enough to oversee the elections of the most powerful nation on Earth and yet has no opinion one way or another on how they should go.

      Microsoft.

      They would be truly impartial.

      They would also be truly secure and trustworthy.

      (Don't believe me, just read their latest press releases! So there.)

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    12. Re:Yeah right by lamasquerade · · Score: 1

      The fact that when someone points out that political involvement in the electoral process is a bad thing, you immediately shoot back 'another system does not exist' (paraphrased obviously) shows the immensity of the corruption in your system. Have you not heard of the idea that the public service is not political? The government can fund a body without influencing it politically. Transparancy and appropriate checks and balances are required to maintain this independance. To see how it's done have a look here.

      --

      // It had been Fat's delusion for years that he could help people. --Philip K. Dick, Valis

    13. Re:Yeah right by HiThere · · Score: 1

      If you create a voting machine without an audit trail, nobody can show that their vote wasn't recorded as they cast it.

      I checked. Our voting machines don't provide audit trails, and there is no way for a person to check and ensure that his vote was recorded as he cast it. I've heard that in some places this isn't the case.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    14. Re:Yeah right by weston · · Score: 1

      Who makes the voting system go?
      We do! We do!
      Who keeps e-lection source unknown?
      We do! We do!

    15. Re:Yeah right by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1
      From the last section of The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, by Greg Palast:

      The Russians voted a resolution demanding that American presidential elections, like Haiti's and Rwanda's, should be held under the auspices of the United Nations.

      Seems reasonable once you've read the book, seen the result and witnessed it's consequences.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    16. Re:Yeah right by Jardine · · Score: 1

      An X or checkmark would also be acceptable.

    17. Re:Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless Ashcroft and co are the ones writing the history books.

    18. Re:Yeah right by mpe · · Score: 1

      The fact that when someone points out that political involvement in the electoral process is a bad thing, you immediately shoot back 'another system does not exist' (paraphrased obviously) shows the immensity of the corruption in your system. Have you not heard of the idea that the public service is not political?

      Also having people who might be seen as having a conflict of interest, e.g. close relations of a candidate, being excluded from making any descisions about an election.

      The government can fund a body without influencing it politically. Transparancy and appropriate checks and balances are required to maintain this independance. To see how it's done have a look here.

      Not just the case in Australia. The norm in many parts of the world is elections are operated by public officials, but that as much of the process as possible is open to inspection by interested parties.

  5. It's not about electronic vote casting. by s20451 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The best idea is not electronic vote casting, it's electronic counting. The most recent Toronto mayoral election used a ballot similar to those used in electronic test-scoring, where you use your HB pencil to fill in a blank. The votes were all counted within a couple of hours after the polls closed.

    If you wanted to avoid confusing the easily confusable, you could have a touch-screen system that prints a paper ballot, with the blanks ideally positioned for the electronic counters. Efficiency and a paper trail.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    1. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, if you're using an HB pencil, doesn't the old rule apply where you have to fill in the whole space? You might find, given the lack of voting prowess say, the people of Florida exhibit, that a lot of ballots get tossed aside just because of a minor mechanical error like that.

      Of course, you could always have a human backup for those ones.

    2. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by abbamouse · · Score: 3, Interesting

      One of the problems uncovered in Florida after the whole election/chad fiasco was that even in counties with optical scanners, there were still significant overvotes and undervotes (spoiled ballots). What's even more interesting is that while the overall error rate was lower than that for punch ballots (no hanging chad to worry about), the errors were not party-neutral. It really did appear to be the case that those attempting to vote Democratic were worse at using the optical system. Electronic voting offers the prospect of error-checking and instant feedback while still keeping the vote secret. Of course, that doesn't mean we still don't have to worry about the technical and verification issues.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    3. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by alanjstr · · Score: 1

      Just print the result when they vote. If they see an error, let the user correct the problem and print again, shredding the bad one.

    4. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by CashCarSTAR · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As someone who thought a lot about this BEFORE Florida 2000, I can tell you what the problem is/was.

      It's rather simple. Well-to-do areas tend to have voting methods with less % of error than more poor-class areas. Why is this I do not know, although I suspect it has to do with local property value rates, similar to education.

      There was a substantial difference in the methods of voting. What needs to be done, is that there needs to be one standard, that is both simple and reasonably verifiable. I go for the pen and paper ballot myself.

    5. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by abbamouse · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're correct -- wealthier counties were more likely to have optical scanners instead of punch ballots, and therefore they had lower rates of error. But that's not the whole story. Even in the optical counties, errors were still disproportionately made by Democrats. Of course, the only ones we're sure of are the overvotes (marking a candidate and then writing in that ticket as well, thus spoiling one's ballot). Moreover, Gore never asked for a recount of overvotes, only the undervotes. Perhaps the Dems had more first-time voters. In any case, these things aren't politically neutral -- different systems favor one party's voters over those of the other party.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    6. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Here in NC, they have a way to fix that. When you turn your optical ballot in, they feed it through the scanner right then. The box will throw up a warning and reject the ballot if there's an overvote or other error reading the ballot, allowing the voter to make corrections.

      If there's an undervote, it assumes you don't care about that contest.

    7. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by reidbold · · Score: 1

      If you can't fill in a bubble with a radius of 2mm, barring some sort of disability which could be taken account for, then it's your own damn fault.

      --
      -Reid
    8. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Do you still have that couch-hocking buffoon running Toronto? He's a big reason I left.

      He's stupid enough to call in the national guard because it snowed... Imagine that, snow in canada.

      Who will save us from this mysterious white powdery substance?

      Nooooooooooooooooooooooooo body!!!

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    9. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Surak · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Several U.S. states already use electronic vote counting, including Michigan. The ballots are filled out exactly as described, much like a Scantron(tm). The twist is *you* are the one who inserts the ballot into the counting machine, so *you* know that your ballot got counted. The machine will immediately notify the poll administrator who's supervising you whether or not there was any kind of read error and inform you that you must darken in your lines better or erase stray marks, etc.

    10. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Surak · · Score: 1

      In Michigan, a state-wide ballot form is used in all elections, and all districts use electronic vote counting machines as mandated by state law. The Michigan ballots are counted by Scantron-type machine and have been since (I believe) the 1992 presidential election.

    11. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by s20451 · · Score: 1

      Yes, we still have him, but not for much longer.

      He was also stupid enough to:

      - say, while on a trip to Africa, he was afraid of being boiled alive by the natives;
      - be photographed shaking hands with a member of the Hell's Angels (then later say he did it out of fear);
      - make a complete ass out of himself on CNN while he was supposed to be discussing SARS.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    12. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't fill in a bubble with a radius of 2mm, barring some sort of disability which could be taken account for..

      Yeah, barring vision problems such as myopia, cataracts and partial or total blindness, and problems which mean that the person is unable to effectivly hold or control a pencil (Including a severe disablility, or E.g. Parkinsons) it's their own damn fault!

      I'm sure this would go down great with millions of diabled voters. Not to mention the millions of elderly voters.

      Keep It Simple Stupid, and stick to something that can be handled by the lowest common denominator. Making tiny marks in a very specific spot on a peice of (Sometimes oddly coloured, so add colour blindness) paper is none of those things.

    13. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by A+Bugg · · Score: 0

      its funny you rant about how all these groups that have disabilities, but the poster you were replying to specifically mentioned their needs should be accounted for. if fact you go on to copy in into your post, so basically what the hell is your point because you are pretty much making an ass out of yourself for no reason.
      a bugg

    14. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Dr.+Bent · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well-to-do areas tend to have voting methods with less % of error than more poor-class areas

      And what exactly is the scientific unit of measure for "X voting method is more accurate than Y"? Or is your statement based on the relative error rates of well-to-do vs. poor areas?

      If this is the case, then how do you know that it is the voting methods that are causing the error. Isn't it just as likely that a college educated "well-to-do" person is better equipped to understand the voting procedure than a high school dropout, and therefore is less likely to vote improperly?

    15. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you didn't read all the way down. I expect you got tired. Here, let me re-post the last bit for you

      Keep It Simple Stupid, and stick to something that can be handled by the lowest common denominator. Making tiny marks in a very specific spot on a peice of (Sometimes oddly coloured, so add colour blindness) paper is none of those things.

      The idea is flawed simply because what the original poster thinks is a small minority of voters is in fact quite large minority of voters. So you have to provide an alternative system for millions upon millions of voters, and now you have two voting systems which just adds to the possible consfusion.

      You need a system which can be used by everyone, not by some of them and well, we'll deal with the others somehow if its a big enough problem.

    16. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

      We do this in Virginia as well (at least here in Hampton). However, instead of pencils they provide Sharpie markers. As anyone familiar with OMR knows, while ballpoint pens do not work, almost all markers do. Sharpies actually tend to work better than pencils.

      No stray graphite dust, no eraser dust, no possibility of erasing after the fact. I've gotta say that I have been thoroughly impressed by the OMR system in combination with the Sharpie markers. The circles and text are huge (for those with poorer vision). The layout is straightforward (big oval next to big text).

      Frankly, if you are too stupid to use the OMR/Sharpie then you really don't deserve to be voting.

    17. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      say, while on a trip to Africa, he was afraid of being boiled alive by the natives;

      Are you sure he isn't Prince Philip in disguise? He must at least be related to the man.

    18. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference isn't all that mysterious. The machines weren't set the same in all counties.

      In the counties with lower error rates, the machines were set to spit out spoiled ballots immediately, and give the voter one chance to correct them.

      In the (mostly black and poor) counties with higher error rates, the machines were set to accept all ballots regardless of whether they were spoiled or not.

      Of course this inevitably shows up in the press as, "poor people are too stupid to fill out a ballot correctly", rather than "Florida is an utterly corrupt state with systematic rigging of elections."

    19. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Surak · · Score: 0

      If you can't use the OMR/Sharpie, how are you going to use any other kind of voting system, other than "everyone who wants Candidate Foo, raise your hand!"?

      Seriously, there has to be a basic literacy requirement to vote. You have to be able to read the ballot, and you have to be smart enough and have enough manual dexterity to make SOME kind of mark, hole punch, etc. Actually, at least in Michigan, the poll workers will help you fill out your ballot if you're really *that* incapable, but then if you're really *that* incapable you won't know if the poll worker is actually cheating you.

    20. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by linca · · Score: 1

      Counting efficiency does not need to involve machines. Counting votes has the advantage of being massively parallel, which means that with a million volunteers (i.e. less that one percent of the electorate ; if you can't get that amount of volunteers, you have other problems about your democracy), votes will be safely counted, with a slow, reliable process, in about two hours, for all of the US.

    21. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by protogeek · · Score: 1
      The Michigan ballots are counted by Scantron-type machine

      Incorrect. Some Michigan ballots are Scantron-style, some (including my own district's) are punch cards.

    22. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by MsGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Literacy tests had been used since Reconstruction to screen out black voters. The 1960s Voting Rights Act finally put a stop to them. Not a good idea since it can be abused.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    23. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason there's more dem misvotes is because democrats aren't smart enough to vote. If they were they'd be republicans instead.

      Thus, balot methods are fine. The new counting policy should go like this:

      Republican vote: counts as 1
      Democrat vote: don't count, voter is an idiot

      All future elections democrats have zero votes. Problem solved!

    24. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by Surak · · Score: 1

      I thought Teri Lynn Land (or maybe it was Candice Miller) was talking about making the Scantron ballots statewide? That never happened?

    25. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1
      It seems to me that you're trying to imply that people who vote Democratic are simply stupider (more prone to error) than people who vote Republican. Perhaps you're not, but you're giving that impression.

      Even stipulating that there were more errors accrued by Democrats (I'd like to see the figures though, and judge for myself whether there's any statistically significant difference), that still doesn't mean that the discrepancy was due to Democratic Party voters using the equipment incorrectly. It could equally be true that Republican-controlled districts were simply more lenient toward errors which favored Republican votes. The Republicans certainly claimed that the Democrats were so biased in judging problematical votes.

      Finally, IIRC Gore offered at one point that all the votes should be recounted; overvotes, undervotes, all votes. He should have done itn much earlier in the process, before it was so plain that simple stalling would gain GWB the Oval Office, but the offer was made.

      Such a recount might well have had GWB win anyway (most post hoc analyses lean that way), in which case there would be no shadow on his legitimacy.

      Bush chose not to take that chance, however, showing that he was less interested in the American political process or the will of the American people than in a favorable result for himself - a philosophy he has continued to exhibit since.

    26. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by sheldon · · Score: 1

      "Bush chose not to take that chance, however, showing that he was less interested in the American political process or the will of the American people than in a favorable result for himself - a philosophy he has continued to exhibit since."

      This is ultimately what was wrong in 2000.

      The election was an example of the Win At All Costs mentality that is so pervasive in the GOP. :( We just saw another example of this mentality down in Texas this past week.

    27. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by William+Tanksley · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that you're trying to imply that people who vote Democratic are simply stupider (more prone to error) than people who vote Republican. Perhaps you're not, but you're giving that impression.

      No, I've seen this before -- he's basing this on a statement of alleged fact, that Gore picked up an enormously higher number of votes in the manual recount than Bush did. I'm not going to bother looking this up right now, you'll have to make your own call on its accuracy, but I suspect that it's valid; there were not that many no-pres-vote ballots compared to the number of ballots with a valid vote on them, so in order to plausibly claim there was a chance of winning the election, Gore would have to have come up with a truly phenominal ratio on the blank ballots.

      There are two possible conclusions to reach from this fact (if fact it is): first, that people intending to vote for Gore made mistakes more often than people intending to vote for Bush, or second, the recounting standards were applied inconsistently but in favor of Gore.

      I believe that the previous poster would claim the second was more likely; I'm inclined to agree with him, since the counties Gore concentrated most on had political machinery almost entirely controlled by people belonging to the Democratic party. (No conspiracy theory here; it's a simple matter of shared interest. No accusations of fraud are needed, either; interpretation of ambiguity is hard enough anyhow.)

      It could equally be true that Republican-controlled districts were simply more lenient toward errors which favored Republican votes. The Republicans certainly claimed that the Democrats were so biased in judging problematical votes.

      Correct -- but that wouldn't result in Gore catching up with Bush; instead it would result in a continued tie.

      Finally, IIRC Gore offered at one point that all the votes should be recounted; overvotes, undervotes, all votes. He should have done itn much earlier in the process,

      Yes, he should have -- ideally before trying to run out the clock his own way, including deliberately appealing to exclude counting certain republican-leaning ballots.

      That was SUCH a debacle. The news channels, the vote counters, the candidates, the Florida legislatures, the voters who approved the ballots, the Supremes (both courts)... Nobody looked good.

      Honestly, the only people I sympathise with are the candidates; I don't think they did well, but at least they both were straightforwardly looking after their own interests. I would be more impressed if they showed more courtesy, but one has to admit that it was a contest, and letting the other side win when things were so close would seem tragic...

      (The voters? Naw -- they voted close, they got a close race. That's the shakes with voting.)

      Bush chose not to take that chance, however, showing that he was less interested in the American political process or the will of the American people than in a favorable result for himself - a philosophy he has continued to exhibit since.

      This analysis happens to apply to both candidates, doesn't it.

      -Billy

    28. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1
      Thanks for the clarification, I think I misunderstood the original poster's point.

      This analysis happens to apply to both candidates, doesn't it.

      Not sure how it applies to Gore, it seems to me he's behaved himself pretty well since the debacle (not speaking to his behaviour at that time). No way of knowing how he'd have behaved as President, but he hasn't been out of line in his current non-position.

    29. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      The usual method is to compare the error rate in the same district when it changes to a brand-new voting method.

    30. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by mpe · · Score: 1

      The best idea is not electronic vote casting, it's electronic counting. The most recent Toronto mayoral election used a ballot similar to those used in electronic test-scoring, where you use your HB pencil to fill in a blank. The votes were all counted within a couple of hours after the polls closed.

      Since there are actual ballot papers involved here a manual recount is perfectly possible. e.g. if any of the candidates contests the results of the machine.
      Anyway there is less scope for the machine to be rigged, because it need have no "knowlage" of what a paper means.

    31. Re:It's not about electronic vote casting. by William+Tanksley · · Score: 1

      I don't know how Gore would behave, but I know how he behaved. I'm not ashamed of him or anything (although I'm certainly far from impressed); I don't blame him any more than I blamed Bush; but I don't think it's right to single out Bush as though his conduct during the debacle was any worse than Gore's.

      If, as the prior post claimed, Bush's conduct was an indicator of later bad performance, then Gore's conduct would have been as well.

      Now, I just happen to believe that it's not really a good measure; the only thing it showed perfectly well is that neither one was willing to give in.

      I do believe that there's some blame to be distributed between the candidates, but I can also see that I'll never have enough information to enable me to place it -- so I won't bother. The other parties' guilt seems to be easier to establish.

      -Billy

  6. When we did it... by dcs · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Here, when we tested a new electronic voting machine that registered all votes in paper (and allowed you to see your vote "paper trail" through a small window), people found it MUCH worse than the system used in the previous election (and much of the rest of the country in that election).

    Me, I think it was because the ads teaching people how to vote in the old machines were displayed nation-wide, *including* the places where the new system was used.

    --
    (8-DCS)
  7. Whatever by the-dude-man · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Whatever, as if it has to be a private company doing the polling, and whats to say the code does not send the data directly, encrypted to a key generated by the goverenment, to the government? In that event the data couldnt be tampered with.

    I agree we need to take some precautions to safegaurd the electorial process...but that dosnt mean we cant use electronic means to poll. Just like there were concerns about the inital voting schemes, there are concerns about this one, but that dosnt mean we cant simply make desgin changes to ensure the integrety of the data. And since when has the government been MORE credible than the private sector? They have had just as many scandals, if not more.

    In any event, the answer is to simply design in safegaurds....not go back to older ways just because your scared of technology...please

    1. Re:Whatever by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Whatever, as if it has to be a private company doing the polling, and whats to say the code does not send the data directly, encrypted to a key generated by the goverenment, to the government? In that event the data couldnt be tampered with.

      Except by the government.

      And since when has the government been MORE credible than the private sector? They have had just as many scandals, if not more.


      You said it.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  8. Greatest scam in history. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1, Insightful


    History will eventually show electronic voting to be the most excellent means for subverting democracy ever invented.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Greatest scam in history. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
      Actually, that distinction will be given to the permanent marker.

      May seem wierd now, but with centuries of perspective I think it will all make sense.

    2. Re:Greatest scam in history. by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      History will eventually show electronic voting to be the most excellent means for subverting democracy ever invented.

      Obviously you're not familiar with the history of democracy.

      Democracy can survive corruption, fraud, graft, etc--hell, it seems to thrive on it, actually--

      No, wait. Maybe you do know that, and "one voter one vote" and "everyone vote" count as subversions of democracy... yeah, that must be it...

    3. Re:Greatest scam in history. by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      History will eventually show electronic voting to be the most excellent means for subverting democracy ever invented.

      Taken literally, gotta agree. If the procedures are very open it will take much longer and a lot more work to subvert the process.

  9. bound for corruption by meatbridge · · Score: 4, Informative

    it happened in florida in the 2000 elections. thousands of minority voters were deemed unqualified to vote because a corrupted registration system declared them to be felons. this occured because they shared a name with a felon others were barred having been convicted in the year 2009. if we can't get the registration right what chance do we have for the actual votes.

    1. Re:bound for corruption by workindev · · Score: 1
      thousands of minority voters were deemed unqualified to vote because a corrupted registration system declared them to be felons

      This ignorant assertion only proves that you really will believe anything you are told. If you took a minute to review the actual facts, this is what you would find about this non-story:

      The 1998 Florida Election audit found a large number of unregistered and invalid votes cast. State Elections supervisor Ethel Baxter (a Democrat) ordered a list compiled containing names of registered voters who should not be allowed to vote. This list included deceased people who voted in 1998 as well as convicted felons, who are not allowed to vote in Florida.

      This list was distributed to local county election officials, who had the option of using the list to ban people from voting. Many counties opted not to use the list.

      Local county election officials notified everybody on the list at least 30 days before the election that they would not be allowed to vote, and gave procedures to dispute their inclusion on the list.

      Only 5 people officially complained that they were incorrectly included on the list. When the Federal Election Commission held hearings on the matter, NOBODY came forward to claim they were denied the right to vote.

      The NAACP sued and Florida settled out of court because the proceedure changes had already been implemented.

      This was such a non-story that the only "journalist" who deemed this newsworthy was British reporter Greg Palast. 5 seconds on his web site completely removes any credibility he may have had as he appears to be dedicated to discrediting the Bush presidency. This is a non-story.

    2. Re:bound for corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in California (where they do not check ID to vote), thousands of illegal aliens voted for the party of the local party boss.

      California has more problems than Florida had (including the infamous ballot boxes in the Bay incident), but no one is saying anything about it.

    3. Re:bound for corruption by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Do you have any sources for your version of the story?

      I'm just curious because you claim we should review the actual facts, but the facts don't line up with your version of the story.

      http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/vote2000/report/main.h tm

      I would also like to know what your political motivation is for claiming this is a non-story.

    4. Re:bound for corruption by cheezedawg · · Score: 1
      Well, aside from its partisan conclusions, I thought the USCCR actually backs up his "version" pretty well.

      And don't be fooled- that USCCR report is nothing more than a partisan attack by some bitter democrats. In fact, the only republican on the commission solidly thrashed the conclusions in her dissenting opinion.

      There are a lot of people that disagree with the findings of that commission. Here is a statistical analysis by a Yale professor that comes to the exact opposite conclusion as the USCCR:
      It is difficult to see any evidence that African-Americans in Florida were systematically discriminated against in terms of voting. Even assuming that cross-sectional evidence is useful in evaluating this claim, it appears more consistent with indicating that the problem was worst in those counties where African-Americans were county election supervisors. It is difficult to reconcile that evidence with some notion that there was intent to disqualify African-American voters. The panel data makes it very difficult to ascertain any systematic bias either intentional or unintentional against African-American voters.
      There may be imperfections in our voting system, and those should be addressed (and some of them have been citing that NAACP settlement referenced by the parent), but this is a total non-story to the partisan whiners that want to make this into a huge right-wing conspiracy- the facts just dont support that.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    5. Re:bound for corruption by sheldon · · Score: 1

      I guess I'm still looking for this cite that shows the FEC had a review and came to different conclusions. Suddenly all the right-wing partisans have gotten all quiet.

      Statistically speaking the problems in Florida are similar to problems in other parts of the country. The fact remains that problems do exist. Unfortunately in the case of Florida because we had a statistical tie, those small problems got escalated to really big problems.

      "but this is a total non-story to the partisan whiners that want to make this into a huge right-wing conspiracy- the facts just dont support that."

      As opposed to the partisan whiners who keep claiming this is a non-story.

  10. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    Check Yes: Happy confirmed position Saddam
    Check No: Mad at you for voting against him Saddam

    Remember, armed guards stood over them as they voted.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  11. Top 5 reasons for Electronic Voting by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Funny

    5. Two words: Digital chads

    4. Chicago motto: "Log in early, and vote often"

    3. In the Mayor Daley election, even dead OS's like BSD can vote.

    2. You can now use Grokster and Kazaa to steal votes.

    1. "I'm from Chicago. Give me two public keys".

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  12. No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "When people are cut off from voting by police roadblocks, and thousands of ballots are thrown away, or arranged in a confusing way to try to get people to vote for someone that they don't want to, there's more than just a paper trail problem."

    Sorry, but the roadblocks thing is a persistent urban legend. If there was anything to it, Gore would have sued over it. He did not.

    Ballots thrown out? The only ones tossed out were ballots WITHOUT VOTES.

    Confusing arrangement? The Democrats arranged those ballots, and they only confused idiots who did not follow directions.

    1. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Millennium · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Where is the proof?

      If it happened, then there will be proof of it. Even the CIA couldn't cover up a roadblock of that magnitude; there will be thousands of witnesses. A handful of witnesses is easy to fake, or to silence, but you can't do that in the numbers that such a "voter roadblock" would produce.

      Show me anything more than a hanfdul, and I might be convinced. But the previous poster was correct: if these roadblocks had really occurred, there would have been more than enough evidence for Gore -or, if not him personally, any number of voter groups- to sue. He has not done so. That, I think, is the most telling thing about this.

      Just because we don't accept accusations without proof doesn't make us blind followers of The Establishment. "Innocent until proven guilty" is the cornerstone of our legal system. So prove them guilty.

    2. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "Innocent until proven guilty" is the cornerstone of our legal system. So prove them guilty.

      Ahem.. Iraq?

      --
      --------
      Free your mind.
    3. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Red+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Actually, there was a lawsuit and claim with the FEC (I wanna say Al Sharpton was the point man, but honestly don't remember). Both the courts and the FEC threw the claims out as being without any basis in fact.
      Not that that'll stop certain parties from whining.

      --
      "If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
      ~Epictetus
    4. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BZZT! Godwin's Law! Sorry, but thanks for playing.

    5. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered about this myself until I realized that noone in a position of power (which includes the loser in our 51/49 system) will produce the proof because it would lead to a cascade of evidence that both major US parties are thoroughly compromised by one or another type of corporate interest and that true representation is a paradise lost. Those who produce any evidence are then easily dismissed as crackpots, because the official government/media sources do not report it every fifteen minutes in front of a ticking clock and the latest images of third-world liberation and disease.

      Or maybe I'm really George W Bush himself just dragging a stinking fish across your path...

    6. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by HiThere · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Considering the other decisions made by the courts and the FEC, I don't trust their word. I'd rather see the evidence myself. The only evidence I saw was newspaper reports stating that both things happened.

      Now newspaper reports aren't exactly known as a source of real truth, so I don't put much credence in them. OTOH, in the absence of other acceptable evidence (which doesn't include the sworn word of apparently complicit officials)...

      Still, the public word of the Supreme Court was:
      1) You can't count the votes until we say so.
      2) There isn't time to count the votes, so seal the evidence.

      This causes me to doubt the veracity of the court system.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're forgetting that most of the military ballots were tossed.

      Hey, in New York City, about a decade ago, there was a vote counting scandal. It seems the lever machines were fixed to favor one mayoral nominee who won (this was before Guiliani, it was a Democrat), and the contractor was eventually jailed. Can't remember who it was.

    8. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Where is the proof that this story is made up?

      I haven't seen "proof" on this either way. I've seen newspaper articles, and most of the ones covering the event said that it happened. But that's certainly not proof...I've been on a site what was later covered by a news story.

      What news would you see if a poll were closed early? What news would you see if a poll were moved? Why would you expect to?

      What percentage of people who were told that "We can't find you as a registered voter" would you expect to challenge the assertion? It was probably even true, as the people who sit at the polls aren't the ones who publish the lists of qualified voters.

      P.S.: Just because Florida became famous doesn't mean that that was the only state experiencing irregularities. But I believe that only in Florida were things close enough and widespread enough that it's plausible that it changed the result. (But plausible doesn't mean certain. Not only is it not certain, but the records have been officially sealed so it will be decades before it *can* be checked as to whether voting miscounts after the vote was cast changed the result. "To preserve faith in the system." [That's probably actually a paraphrase rather than a quote.])

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    9. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The US Civil Rights Commission report on the 2000 FL elections reported that unauthorized vehicle checkpoints took place near voting places: This was a minor impact compared to some of the other tactics which disenfranchised thousands. The NCAA lawsuit settlement resulted in sweeping changes to FL election laws. One of the most important exposes of FL election fraud was done by investigative reporter Greg Palast. Anyone who's unaware of the massive election fraud which put Shrub in office must be limiting their news sources to the censored, right wing US news media.

    10. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Red+Warrior · · Score: 1

      I'd rather see the evidence myself.
      And I'm sure that, if there were any, we would have. I doubt the Democrats would have demured due to decorum.

      Picking nits
      Actually, the public word of the Supreme Court was:
      1)We grant the temporary injunction, until we rule on the case. (Whether or not they should have, is another matter)
      2)OK, you can (re-re-re) count the votes, but that doesn't change the federal deadline to have the results certified.

      --
      "If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
      ~Epictetus
    11. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This causes me to doubt the veracity of the court system.

      Nah. The Supreme Court isn't corrupt! If there were a conflict of interest, like a justice's children working for the law firm representing a defendent [1] or a spouse working for the foundation responsible for vetting applications for positions in a defendent's administration [2], I'm sure they'd recuse themselves.

      [1] Like, say, Antonin Scalia's two sons did...

      [2] Or Clarence Thomas's wife did...

    12. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by number11 · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that most of the military ballots were tossed.

      That would be the Florida absentee ballots from overseas that were in violation of election laws? (Although some tried to make it a matter of "military", military ballots were handled by the same rules as other absentee ballots.) The ones not properly filled in, the ones not received by the legal deadline? The ones issued in response to ballot applications that were tampered with by Republican election workers?

      Actually, they mostly weren't tossed. The Democrats ended up not having the guts to insist that absentee ballots meet the legal standards.

    13. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      That would be the Florida absentee ballots from overseas that were in violation of election laws? (Although some tried to make it a matter of "military", military ballots were handled by the same rules as other absentee ballots.)

      There is a special issue with military absentee ballots.

      1) Some military post offices, as a matter of policy, do NOT put a dated postmark on mail passing through them.

      2) Florida election laws require a postmark date, and mandate discarding the ballot if it is absent.

      3) FEDERAL law says that absentee ballots from those in military service must be counted (at least in federal elections).

      4) According to the supremacy clause of the US Constitution, federal law supercedes state law (when they are in conflict and the federal law is consititutionally valid, as is the case here).

      So the military ballots must be counted even if they are missing the dated postmark required by "the same rules as other absentee ballots".

      Polls indicated that the military absentee ballots would be overwhelmingly for Bush (by about 4 to 1). So excluding hundreds of them would have made a significant shift in the results, in Gore's favor.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    14. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Yeah,

      Ask an 60/70s era computer student if the computer ever spit out his punch card because their was "nothing on it". I bet he would have disagreed.

      If there is a punch in on hole and one hole only on a line, then it's clearly a vote. Just because you have machines to count the chadless votes doesn't mean you have to throw out the one's with chads.

      Visual inspection has ALWAYS been the ultimate benchmark for a votes value. When paper ballots were used exclusively, every vote had to be visually inspected. And they used the horse-sense methodology for determining if their was a vote and who it went to.

      Regarding that "democrat". She switched parties shortly after the election. The legal issue was that she didn't PUBLISH the ballot as it was going to appear. She did not meet the legal requirement set forth by the LAW. It didn't matter whether she was a Democrat or Republican.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    15. Re:No roadblocks, no votes thrown away. by number11 · · Score: 1

      1) Some military post offices, as a matter of policy, do NOT put a dated postmark on mail passing through them.
      Military spokescritters at the time said that policy WAS to have dated postmarks, though they also said sometimes circumstances prevented it from happening.

      2) Florida election laws require a postmark date, and mandate discarding the ballot if it is absent.
      In previous elections, that was true. Near as I can tell in 2000, Florida law required either a postmark date, or a dated signature. That's not to say that some weren't improperly rejected. Some were also rejected for other reasons, such as the voter not being registered.

      3) FEDERAL law says that absentee ballots from those in military service must be counted
      Certainly not from ineligible voters, or mailed (days? weeks?) after election day. But even assuming that, it's not clear that this was true at that time. I did find one quote suggesting there was a requirement that ballots be counted if they were delivered "expeditiously". Cite?

  13. Paper, what paper? by gpinzone · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here in New York, we use a mechanical switch voting booth. Why isn't that considered unreliable, too?

    1. Re:Paper, what paper? by aborchers · · Score: 1

      If it's like the machines I used to use in KY, I believe they punch a roll of paper. I guess they could have tabulating wheels, which are a pretty well-tested technology...

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  14. Bottom line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A) Electronics hardware just isn't reliable enough. Especially when thrown to the whim of the public.

    B) Software is even less reliable. Bug-free software is a near impossibility.

    C) No system, hardware or software, is 100% secure. People could probably figure out ways to change votes remotely via electromagnetic pulses if they had to.

    D) The human factor isn't completely eliminated. As long as humans have some role in the vote takin process, the results can fixed. Whether it be from software and hardware designers, hackers, or people mis-reporting the results.

    E) Most people don't trust electronics, some people outright fear them. E.g. my grandfather refuses to use ATMs. What if this causes some people not to vote?

    1. Re:Bottom line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      E) Most people don't trust electronics, some people outright fear them. E.g. my grandfather refuses to use ATMs. What if this causes some people not to vote?

      I have never voted before in my life. I don't ever know when to go register where to go or how to do it and the biggest reason is because its awfully inconvient. Besides, my vote doesn't matter because my states electoral vote is ALWAYS for the republican. But, if I was sent an e-mail or letter giving me a URL or maybe a letter I can send back to register and then was provided a security key that allowed me to log into a website and check some radio buttons of who I wanted to be president, I would definately do it. I believe you would see voter turn out go way,way up.

      We trust computers to do everything else in this world. They do everything for us from forcasting the weather to guiding missles. Why do we fear a relatively simple counting process? I trust a computer count much more than someone wearing a green visor.

  15. Mechanical machines had problems also by asmithmd1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you are old enough to remember the all mechanical machines where you flipped small levers to vote and pulled a large arm to cast your vote. The votes were mechanically accumulated and would sometimes get stuck yielding results like 2273 votes for one canidate and 999 votes for the other. What can you do then?

    1. Re:Mechanical machines had problems also by Gleef · · Score: 1

      Old enough to remember them? Here in New York State, we still use them!

      --

      ----
      Open mind, insert foot.
    2. Re:Mechanical machines had problems also by bmasel · · Score: 1

      Here in Madison, WI the lever and wheel systems were in use til 1992, when i ran a write-in race for Sheriff. As no-one had run as a serious write-in in 22 years, the paper rolls for write-ins had not been changed, became brittle, and would tear as it was drawn thru the machine.

      Only 2 techs were qualified to change the rolls, so many machines were down throughout the campus area, my polling strength. Combined with a heavy turnout, this led to lines up to 4 1/2 hours long (and a great party in the Salvation Army gym, which the lines snaked thru. The pizza joint accross the street delivered hundreds of pies to voters hungry to oust the Bush I regime.)

      Instead of spending a hundred bucks on new paper rolls, the city spent a million and a half to go to Optical Scanner systems.

      --
      Ben Masel: 51,282 votes for US Senate in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary
    3. Re:Mechanical machines had problems also by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      They're still in use in Hanover County, Va!

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    4. Re:Mechanical machines had problems also by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      Yes, and the failure rate with the voting machine is less than that of puch cards, or optically scanned ballots.

  16. Paper trail: the solution by cwernli · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The two main points in electronic voting are:

    1. It's needed
    2. It'll be bug-ridden

    The vendor's point of view (unsurprisingly) is that "bugginess" is only a hypothetical threat, and that it in real-life situations no glitches will occur.

    This is very clearly horseshit. Every IT-implementation has bugs. Repeat: Every. The question is: how many of them can we tolerate ? If it comes down to a word-processor, or a webserver, or even telecom infrastructure: we can afford quite some. If it comes to medical facilities, nuclear plants, or, as in this case, political decisions, the threshold has to be a lot lower. You wouldn't want George W. Bush to have been elected by a bug, would you ?

    The (currently feasible safeguard) solution of the paper trail sounds like an excellent solution:

    a) the voter can immediately control if her vote was cast correctly
    b) the same rule applies as with financial and legal records (where a paper trail has to be conserved)
    c) the "black box" problem that is mentioned in the article is circumvented: the citizen doesn't have to understand how the e-voting booth works, but (see a) can control if her intentions match the outcome.

    1. Re:Paper trail: the solution by Gorm+the+DBA · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You wouldn't want George W. Bush to have been elected by a bug, would you ?

      Umm...he already was...by five cockroa...err...Supreme Court Justices. Apparently the only five votes that mattered.

      Freedom in just a hair under two years!!!!!!

    2. Re:Paper trail: the solution by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't want George W. Bush to have been elected by a bug, would you?

      But the Supreme Court is okay?

      Burn!

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    3. Re:Paper trail: the solution by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      Nice try.

      The Supreme Court ruled that the same standard for recount must be applied statewide, under the "Equal Protection Under the Law" codicil.

      Since, in the end, Bush DID get a bare majority of the popular vote in Florida, he got the electors.

      And in the final analysis, it's the candidate who gets the most electors in the Electoral College who wins. That's the way the system was set up. . .

    4. Re:Paper trail: the solution by jilles · · Score: 1

      The votes were never recounted. Bush campaigned and successfully stopped a recount. Later all evidence was destroyed so we will never know for sure whether he won the election. I'd say the small majority Bush claimed in the end falls well within the huge margin of error that results from using outdated and unreliable voting technology as is common in the US. The outcome may be legal but it was most definately unscientific.

      The democratic thing to do would have been to do a re-election. State-wide or maybe even country wide. However, does it really matter if one guy with a few thousand more supporters than another guy gets to be president? Probably if Bush had farted in public once during the campaign it would have had a stronger effect than if all voting machines would have been perfect. In the end Gore lost his once comfortable (projected) majority and Bush won enough to be able to represent the US people. That's good enough for me. It's better to have a winner than a loser for a president.

      Personally, I would have rather seen a democrat win the election but I don't have the right to vote in the US.

      --

      Jilles
    5. Re:Paper trail: the solution by zeugma-amp · · Score: 1

      You might want to look a little closer at what happened in the U.S. Supreme Court. The actual vote was more like 7 of 9 that the FL. Sup. Court erred in its rulings.

      --
      This is an ex-parrot!
    6. Re:Paper trail: the solution by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      Every IT-implementation has bugs. Repeat: Every.

      I disagree. There is perfect code out there.

      When it matters, and when you can afford it, it's quite possible to have perfect code. Something tells me that the code for the space shuttle is significantly more complex than any voting booth code would have to be.

      Here's my idea of a perfect electronic voting system:

      Touch screen input, with a keyboard for write-in votes.

      Plain as day listing of choices before final selection is made.

      Paper audit trail printed though window visible to voter (window solid enough to prevent tampering, and record on something similar to a register receipt.)

      EPROMS are not field-upgradable, and socket used to program eproms is tamper evident.

      Hardware checksum of eprom code contents on the screen at all times, made as tamper-proof as possible.

      Network programmable in terms of candidates and party affiliations only- nothing else can be changed by network. Results can be read by network.

      tamper-evident physical reset counters, indicating the number of times the machine has been zeroed or candidates changed.

      An internal hard-drive,cd or tape storage that's tamper-evident, making a permenant record of all activity on that machine.

      So that's three records, -eprom for single election results, a printed audit trail, and permanent storage of lifetime activity on a particular machine. Tamper-evident/resistant.

      In addition, I think that ID's should be shown before you vote, only to record that you did vote. To avoid allegations of a 'voting tax', non-driver's licenses would have to be free, subject to the same proof standards as a normal driver's license.

      Oh yeah, the entire system should be open to everyone for review. If the system is robust enough, it shouldn't matter that everyone knows exactly how it's made, as it should be extremely difficult to scam the system. (This is, of course, the standard open-source mantra.)

      Now, as a disclaimer, I'm a mechanical engineer, and my programming knowledge doesn't go much deeper than an introductory C class.

      Whaddya'll think?

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    7. Re:Paper trail: the solution by Salgak1 · · Score: 1
      Several points.

      1. The US isn't a democracy, it's a republic. There IS a difference.

      2. The United States Constitutions does not allow do-overs, AND leaves administration of elections to the several states. Florida law required that the certification of elections for electors for the President of the United States be completed by "x" days after the election. Florida did so, in accordance with their laws.

      3. Based on the evidence ( . . . as opposed to the law), .us citizenship is not required to vote in .us. Likewise, while technically illegal, campaign contributions from foreign nationals are tolerated. Mind you, it's easier to do either if a member or supporter of the party of the (nominal) left in .us, the "Democrats" (who are barely moderate by most non-.us standards)

    8. Re:Paper trail: the solution by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'd add two other 'spheres' with near perfect code implementations: health care (particularly diagnostic and monitoring equipment) and automobiles (ignition and fuel management systems).

      I suspect the grandparent has a rather narrow view of both 'IT' and the world.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    9. Re:Paper trail: the solution by weston · · Score: 1

      Bugginess is not my only concern, though it is a concern. My question: Where is that classic overhysterical paranoia of "hackers" that usually pervades discussion about safety/privacy of data?

      I may be overparanoid, but I wonder if it's because the hacker game is one that all parties involved are actually willing to play. It's been done in the past (dead voters, altered ballots, running out the clock) and I wonder if politically jaded simply view it as a potential tactic...

  17. Electronically Voting could have been handy for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Earlier this week, I had to vote on two local ballot question, selectmen and a state rep. (Braintree, Massachusetts)

    Funny thing is, they ran out of state ballots, and we had to wait around an hour for new ones to be shipped from town hall.

    While talking with the others waiting, it struck me odd as it's somehow contradictory how we are pressed to become more interactive with the community, yet at the same time moving towards measures that will reduce the interactivity.

    You have to ask yourself, how many of your friends did you meet outside of a obligatory system of meeting, such as school, or work? The question may seem off topic, but what would it be like in a society without such meetings?

  18. An obvious candidate for required open source by binaryDigit · · Score: 1

    OK, generally I'm not one of those "everything should be open source" voices, but I do think that this is one case where this type of software should be required by law to be open source. The ramifications of any type of fraud is way to high. But more importantly, I think that a separate agency should be involved in the archiving/building of the source. After all, just because someone says "download our source code X" doesn't mean that X is what is actually running. The source should be baselined and backed up on releases, as well as checksums produced and verified for the resulting binaries.

    1. Re:An obvious candidate for required open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The source for an australian e-voting system is available online

    2. Re:An obvious candidate for required open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      That link should have been
      http://www.elections.act.gov.au/EVACS.html.
      Sor ry

  19. historical info by AbdullahHaydar · · Score: 1

    In 2000, Arizona Democrats had the first online balloting in their primary. The link contains some analysis also.

    --


    Suicide Booth: You are now dead! Thank you for using Stop and Drop, America's favorite since 2008.
  20. Why not this? by betanerd · · Score: 1

    Require something that cant be falsified like retinal scanners eliminate security concerns. To eliminate privacy concerns, by law (or new amendment), all personal data should only be held until the results have been counted then irrecoverably destroyed.

    Im sure there is a flaw that I am over looking (aside from the slippery slope argument), what is it?

    --
    Insert sig here (slashdot) Insert cig here (Lewinsky)
    1. Re:Why not this? by Shadowmist · · Score: 1

      The flaw is that once personal data is collected, there is no assurance that it ever goes away.

  21. Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "No less so since the new witch trials began"

    They have not begin, sorry. There are not even any plans to begin them.

    "Being a dissident in any country is dangerous"

    Except in the US, where it can make you rich and powerful. Just ask Michael Moore.

    1. Re:Get real by Flabby+Boohoo · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Except in the US, where it can make you rich and powerful. Just ask Michael Moore."

      I'm sorry, did you really mean cynical and fat? He certainly is NOT rich and powerful. Why else would he have hijacked the Oscars?

    2. Re:Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your stupid aren't you? He is a multi-millionaire and has very influential powers. Maybe he's not powerful like your loved Neo, but being able to sway American opinion is just as great.

    3. Re:Get real by Flabby+Boohoo · · Score: 1

      "your" right, I am the one that's stupid.

      Anyone that I have talked to about Moore thinks he is a knucklehead, much less power to sway American opinion.

    4. Re:Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You must talkt to a bunch of knucklehead pro-war people who have never read his books or seen his movies. He sheds light on some of the dark areas of this country that they would prefer you not see.

      He's not the best comedian and his funny skits often are a little retarded, but the spirit of the skit is dead on.

      How about we get informed before passing judgement.

    5. Re:Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      O, break out the "your" the one stupid because of a spelling/grammer mistake. I've never seen that one before. I bow to your pioneer thinking.


      And how many people do you talk to that are not of your same opinion? Get out. Debate. Talk to people that hold other viewpoints. He has a large following and he has a larger mass that pays attention to what he says.


      (Isn't Disney getting ready to support his next "documentary"? However, rumor has it, they might cancel their decision.)


      And of course, he has those that don't listen to a word his fat ass says

    6. Re:Get real by missing000 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I'm sorry, did you really mean cynical and fat? He certainly is NOT rich and powerful. Why else would he have hijacked the Oscars?

      Cynical? yes. It's really hard not to be considering our own 'voting irregularities'

      As to his weight, I'll pass. I'm sure he is well aware that obesity is dangerous.

      I have no idea if he is rich, he does however do a very effective job representing the common man.

      As to being powerful, you bet he is. His power is the power of the people. Anyone who raises their voice and gets the kind of resonance his films have deserves to be called powerful.

      Hijack the Oscars? I think not. Many Oscar winners stated their opposition to the war, and Moore did so eloquently.

      I went and heard Moore speak a few weeks before the Oscars. He proudly stated his intentions of making a politically charged speech if awarded an Oscar, and received a standing ovation from a crowd of 6000+.

      I believe that the people who really 'hijacked the Oscars' were the Oakland PD which kept the war protesters far away from the Oscars so the media wouldn't see them.

    7. Re:Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Rich? You decide:
      "Others note the hypocrisy of a radical socialist who claims to speak for the common man yet lives in a $1.9 million New York apartment and sends his daughter to a posh private school." -- http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/3/30 /212203.shtml

      There are many upon many examples, this is only one of them.

      As for the media not being able to record the protestors: What stopped them from walking down the block to the perimeter to do a broadcast

      Yeah, I thought so.

    8. Re:Get real by Flabby+Boohoo · · Score: 1

      ".... and Moore did so eloquently."

      You must have watched a different Oscar ceremony than I did. He most definitely was not eloquent, he was an loudmouth that irritated people instead of inspiring them.

    9. Re:Get real by Flabby+Boohoo · · Score: 0

      Well, if you are going to call people stupid, you should be a little more aware of your own actions.

    10. Re:Get real by missing000 · · Score: 1

      Rich? You decide:
      "Others note the hypocrisy of a radical socialist who claims to speak for the common man yet lives in a $1.9 million New York apartment and sends his daughter to a posh private school." -- http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/3/30 /212203.shtml

      I've seen this quoted from a few very biased fascist leaning sources such as the one you mention with no source listed. Until I see some more impressive information, I will reserve my judgement.

      There are many upon many examples, this is only one of them.

      Show me.

      As for the media not being able to record the protestors: What stopped them from walking down the block to the perimeter to do a broadcast

      I don't know if you noticed, but the media is really lazy.

    11. Re:Get real by missing000 · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I have to disagree here. Many people I talk to would be on the inspired list, so I would say he both inspired and irritated people.

      Hopefully he irritated people enough to start questioning the Bush regime.

    12. Re:Get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would not say imply, I would say that actions are a direct indication of ones mental capacity.

    13. Re:Get real by 2short · · Score: 1

      "No less so since the new witch trials began"

      "They have not begin, sorry. There are not even any plans to begin them."

      Exactly! There aren't any plans to have any trials at all, they're just locking people up.

  22. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    I'm sure an electroinc system would have worked so much better.

  23. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by Ripplet · · Score: 1

    Yes, in fact, I believe in the last vote (actually a referendum on whether he should stay, hence the yes/no options), Saddam managed to swing the few floaters and scored 100%. Obviously he feels no need to further improve the voting process.

    --

    Skiing? Check out The Independant Skiers Portal

  24. Sandinista elections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Remember, armed guards stood over them as they voted"

    This is how the Sandinistas won their first election (after they sent goon squads to beat up would-be ballot opponents: they had armed terrorists "guarding" the polling places.). Yes, the vote counting was fair (which can be an unusual thing), but everything else was not.

    They lost their 2nd election because revulsion at all their terrorism overcame the fear of the voters (and they were also buoyed up by the overthrow of the other Soviet colonial dictatorships in Europe which occured at the same time).

  25. Use electronics only to prevent errors by Logic+Bomb · · Score: 1
    I don't think anyone reading Slashdot needs enlightenment on the dangers of a completely electronic voting system. Limited use of electronics could do wonders for stopping problems in the recording of choices by voters and the counting of the results. Instead of using pencil and paper, or especially punch cards, electronic machines should be used to create a ballot that is then printed out for the voter to inspect and drop in a ballot box. These perfectly formatted ballots can then be quickly and accurately counted by a machine that doesn't have to account for double votes, incorrect votes, smudges, hanging chads, etc.

    Anyone who says a purely electronic system is the best idea is either totally ignorant of its inherent problems or has money to gain from such a system's adoption.

    1. Re:Use electronics only to prevent errors by mpe · · Score: 1

      Limited use of electronics could do wonders for stopping problems in the recording of choices by voters and the counting of the results. Instead of using pencil and paper, or especially punch cards, electronic machines should be used to create a ballot that is then printed out for the voter to inspect and drop in a ballot box.

      One thing to remember is that a machine to print out ballots can go wrong in a lot more ways that a pencil and paper can. It's a lot easier to have some extra pencils than some extra machines and a generator.

  26. So when is the article going to come out about the dangers of trusting electronic news websites? Don't we need to remain firmly fixed to a concrete paper trail for news, lest history itself become so malleable as to resemble Orwell's 1984?

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  27. Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by curtisk · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Along with Dr. Dill, endorsers of the resolution include professors from Yale, M.I.T., Princeton, the University of California at Berkeley, Bryn Mawr and Johns Hopkins, as well as industry experts from Apple, Sun Microsystems, Cisco and Unisys. Dr. Mercuri has written substantially on electronic voting and is one of the group's most outspoken members. She worries that no electronic voting system has been certified to even the lowest level of federal government or international computer security standards, nor has any been required to comply with such.

    VS.

    "When you're dealing with computer scientists, they deal in a world of theoretics, and under that scenario anything is possible," Ms. Bonsall said. "If you probe a little further, the chance of these failures, the risk of that happening wide-scale in a national election is almost nil."

    Paul Terwilliger, director of product development at Sequoia Voting Systems, one of the largest manufacturers of electronic systems, said that while no one disputes the need for safeguards, complaints about machines like his company's were uninformed. "I think the concerns being raised are 100 percent valid," Mr. Terwilliger said. "However, they're being raised by people who have little idea about what actually goes on."

    I think I'm going with the doubters on this one, not with the people selling it. I also like the quote(s) that question the fact of "how can we verify there's been no tampering? And "if its so secure why can't we look in it?"

    And in regard to Ms. Bosnall's quote, we're not so much worried about wide-scale national failure as we are with tampering .....big difference.
    America gets scarier by the day.

    --

    Sehr geehrter Toilettenbenutzer!

    1. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      The day we adopt a closed-source electronic voting system is the day that US democracy, sick after decades of fighting the two cancers of corporate influence and voter apathy, is finally murdered in its hospital bed.

      Will anyone outside Fort Slashdot notice?

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    2. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by amorsen · · Score: 1

      I think you should strike the "closed-source" part. Even if you have the source, you cannot prove that this source corresponds to the binaries running on the machine.

      What is really needed is a system where everyone can prove that the system works. The easiest way to do that is manually counted paper ballots.

      It will always be a problem when a very small number of voters have a very large influence on the outcome. All the people who vote for any of the losers in a US presidential election had their vote thrown away. With a proportional voting system, a small error is not so disastrous. Of course, you cannot elect a president with a proportional voting system.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    3. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by esnible · · Score: 1

      Although the county has bought the machines it has usually signed a contract making it illegal for them to hire software experts to examine the code.

      Even if you could legally look at the code, and had a copy of it, it would be quite difficult to find a well-hidden "bug."

      I'd like to announce a simple method of verifying the correctness of voting machines. One simply walks into a polling place on election day, dressed like a Ninja, and steals a machine. Dump the machine in a river and issue a press release claiming that it has been smuggled to Burma for reverse-engineering. If the subsequent invasion of Burma involves more than 1,000 soldiers the machine can be assumed to have been rigged.

    4. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by swillden · · Score: 1

      I think you should strike the "closed-source" part. Even if you have the source, you cannot prove that this source corresponds to the binaries running on the machine.

      Yes you can, but it's hard, and requires specialized hardware.

      What is really needed is a system where everyone can prove that the system works. The easiest way to do that is manually counted paper ballots.

      That's one option. Personally, I prefer the idea of easy-to-use touch-screen systems that print a paper ballot with both human-readable and machine-readable sections. The voter can verify the human-readable part before dropping it in the ballot box, and the machines can quickly and reliably total up all of the votes. In the case of a dispute, all of the ballots can be recounted by machine. In the case of a continued dispute, a statistical sample of the ballots can be checked to verify that the human and machine readable parts match. The ballots can also be made available for complete hand recounts if necessary.

      Use of an OCR-able font could make it so the human and machine readable portions are one and the same, but in the absence of a very high level of confidence that slight tweaks to the letters couldn't convince a machine to read it one way while a human reads it another, I'd prefer to have two sections. With an OCR-able font it would be possible to automatically check all of the ballots to see if the sections agree (while still allowing for manual checks as a backstop).

      All the people who vote for any of the losers in a US presidential election had their vote thrown away. With a proportional voting system, a small error is not so disastrous. Of course, you cannot elect a president with a proportional voting system.

      No, but there are other methods you can use to elect a president and which do not just ignore the "losing" votes. The best of the bunch is Condorcet Voting. It's a little complicated, but understandable with a bit of effort, and allows you to vote your true preferences without worrying about throwing your vote away on a sure loser.

      Plus, proportional voting sucks if you're interested in voting for the individual, rather than the party.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    5. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by ansible · · Score: 1

      Mr. Terwilliger said. "However, they're being raised by people who have little idea about what actually goes on."

      And that's exactly the problem people like Mr. Terwilliger don't seem to understand.

      We don't have an idea of what's actually going on, and that what worries us.

      I would be amused (if I wasn't saddened) by the constant retort of these voting machine companies that they need to keep their code closed, because there are lots of trade secrets. How many secrets can there be in just counting some button presses?

    6. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Moderators, When is the Simpsons ever off topic?

    7. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by curtisk · · Score: 1
      How many secrets can there be in just counting some button presses?

      If you knew the answer, that we can't reveal to you, then you wouldn't be so worried, now would you?! :D

      I like how they speak in loops, and try to validate their point by providing no extra info

      --

      Sehr geehrter Toilettenbenutzer!

    8. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      damn, i wish there were a mod for "genius."

      let's just say that if they bring these to my state, they'll need to make sure that they're fire-proof.

    9. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by amorsen · · Score: 1

      If you have hardware smart enough to cryptographically ensure that it is binaries compiled from a certain source that is running, how do you trust that the hardware is running the software faithfully?

      And as to the thrown away votes, as long as there are only two outcomes of a vote, you will always have a worst-case of half the votes thrown away. They didn't get any representation, no matter which system.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    10. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by swillden · · Score: 1

      If you have hardware smart enough to cryptographically ensure that it is binaries compiled from a certain source that is running, how do you trust that the hardware is running the software faithfully?

      That's all about process and audit controls. Check out the whitepaper about the design of the IBM 4758 crypto coprocessor for ideas. You can find it somewhere here. You wouldn't do things exactly the same for a voting machine, but the ideas are similar, at bottom.

      And as to the thrown away votes, as long as there are only two outcomes of a vote, you will always have a worst-case of half the votes thrown away. They didn't get any representation, no matter which system.

      I see what you're getting at. Sure, that's true. But it's necessary to have a single individual in charge at some point. You can't run everything by committee. Well, you could, but it would be a bad idea.

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    11. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by amorsen · · Score: 1

      How do I, as a voter, verify those machines? Will I be allowed to take them apart after the election? Will I be instructed in the use of an electron microscope when I need to verify the workings of the chips?

      By the way, there are plenty of democracies without presidents.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    12. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by swillden · · Score: 1

      How do I, as a voter, verify those machines? Will I be allowed to take them apart after the election? Will I be instructed in the use of an electron microscope when I need to verify the workings of the chips?

      Well, if you wanted to you could check all of the audit trails for all of the hardware, look at the logs of the destructive analysis performed on sample of the devices, perhaps even get involved in those proceses. More realistically, representatives of all of the political parties, plus whoever else wants to join in (press, certainly) should do all of this. Open source, open hardware design, secure manufacturing processes, destructive analysis of sample devices, black box and white box testing, design and development process certification (a la FIPS 140-2 or common criteria certs) etc., are the tools and they're all well understood.

      If you'd like to fund me for a week, I'd be happy to develop and document a process that would satisfy any rational person. It's not hard, just requires a bit of effort.

      By the way, there are plenty of democracies without presidents.

      Name one democracy that doesn't have a chief executive.

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    13. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Basically I would end up having to trust a set of experts. The number of people who can reverse engineer at the required level is simply too small, at least in a country without advanced IC factories. Besides, hardware bugs are obviously hard to find. I think that a sufficiently smart engineer could put in a backdoor that had a good chance of either slipping through testing or looking like an honest error if found.

      Anyway, what do you mean by "chief executive"? The Danish government does not have a president. Perhaps you would suggest that the Queen is the chief executive. Elections are hardly a problem there though... Or take the German government. The president has so little power that few outside Germany even know his name.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    14. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by swillden · · Score: 1

      I think that a sufficiently smart engineer could put in a backdoor that had a good chance of either slipping through testing or looking like an honest error if found.

      And what would that backdoor do? The one thing it could *not* do is change the human-readable portions of the ballots, because the voters themselves would see that error. Which means that, ultimately, carefully hand-counting the ballots will produce a correct outcome. With this approach, machine counting is an optimization intended to reduce the time and cost associated with hand-counting, but hand-counting is always available. And it's not an all-or-none proposition, either. It's possible to use OCR to verify to a high degree of probability that the machine- and human-readable portions match on all the ballots, and it's possible to use random sampling to verify that that program is doing the right thing. It's also possible to use random sampling to verify that the machine counting is behaving correctly. It's possible for the error to affect such a small percentage of the ballots that the statistical sampling misses it, but in that case it also won't affect the outcome. If the outcome is close enough that it could affect the results, we're probably going to be doing hand-counting anyway. Plus, after the election is decided there will be plenty of time to verify by hand that each ballot was counted correctly.

      At *most*, such an "error" would permit a single election to be screwed up enough that we wouldn't realize the problem until a few months later (after it was too late to change it). More likely, though, it would be caught much more quickly, before it could really disrupt the process.

      Anyway, what do you mean by "chief executive"? The Danish government does not have a president.

      And Denmark isn't technically a democracy (it's a constitutional monarchy). Still, Denmark has a Prime Minister who is the head of the government. Germany has both a President and a Chancellor, who is the chief executive. France has a President and a Prime Minister, but while the Prime Minister is technically the head of the government, it's the President who really calls the shots (in fact, I believe he can remove the Prime Minister at will, though it might be political suicide to be so high-handed).

      Regardless of what you call it, every (functional) government has a single individual who is the leader. Why? Because not all decisions can be left to committees. That leader must be selected somehow, and so most people will inevitably "lose" in the sense that their preferred candidate doesn't get the job.

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    15. Re:Opening Arguments Please! *Ding ding ding* by lovebyte · · Score: 1

      So this guy said:
      When you're dealing with computer scientists, they deal in a world of theoretics, and under that scenario anything is possible
      Yeah right! If he had studied computer science he would have known that not everything is possible, not even provable. And that is known for almost a century.

      --

      I'll do it for cheesy poofs.

  28. Another danger to American democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another major danger to democracy in the U.S. is the Democrat Party pushing for changing the census from a count of real people to a situation where statisticians make things much less accurate and "make up" citizens by sampling or other trendy ways to fudge numbers.

    This way, they can get rid of or increase citizens in Republican or Democratic voting districts by just making squiggles on paper in an office. No need to gerrymander even.

    1. Re:Another danger to American democracy by HiThere · · Score: 1

      That may, indeed, be a danger...perhaps.

      But the initial result would be a more accurate estimate. Perhaps we need a dual census. The raw counts, which are used for politically biasing things, like redistricting, and adjusted counts, which are intended to be the best estimate of who actually lives there. This way there would be no "power bonus" for corrupting the estimates (which I agree to be easy... or at least it would be easy to create the appearance of corruption).

      Unfortunately, the argument for the statistical estimate was that it would enable cost cutting. Which would undercut both the raw cuts *and* the statistical adjustment process. (Before doing a statistical adjustment, you want to get the best evidence you can get, as the adjustment process ALWAYS introduces new noise and uncertainty, even as it removes bias.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Another danger to American democracy by 2short · · Score: 1

      That's really funny. "trendy ways to fudge numbers" Lol. So now everybody who actually wants the right answer uses the sampled numbers.

      And it's not changing the number of citizens in a voting district, and certainly not the number of voters who show up on election day. It's changing the number of congressmen coming from particular states. The republicans looked at the raw count, and at the right answer, and decided they liked the wrong answer better.

  29. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's right, Saddam used pieces of paper with a "Yes" box and a "No" box. You simply needed to check yes if you wanted to re-elect Saddam. Mr Hussein got over 99% of the vote. Clearly, his people wanted him there.

    but you translated the text wrong.....

    your yes and no translated correctly but the text at the top read doe you want to elect that sadamm will not kill you?

  30. Misgivings by foo+fighter · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm definetly a techno-geek, but I'm also a pragmatist. Electronic voting isn't going to solve any more problems than it creates.

    A bunch of my concerns that haven't been addressed in the media:
    * The hardware and software are proprietary and not open to public review. My paper has a full page copy of the ballots before every election so the public can review it.

    * Not accessible. How do people missing vision or limbs use them?

    * How are the results audited? Do the electronic logs go into the public domain?

    * Is the incredible expense and TCO of these machines justified? Paper ballots are practically free by comparison.

    * What about absentee voting? What wacky "voting method of the future" can we come for that?

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
    1. Re:Misgivings by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Electonic (internet) voting is in use for some stockholder votes (D.A.Davidson offers it optionally). Maybe whatever they're doing to ensure security and "one share, one vote" integrity should be looked into by the public election types.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:Misgivings by sharekk · · Score: 1

      While I have misgivings of my own I think some of these can be addressed

      * The hardware and software are proprietary and not open to public review. My paper has a full page copy of the ballots before every election so the public can review it.
      Do they have step by step examples of how to use punchcards or check in the boxes? I expect you will still know your voting options ahead of time -- it's the method of registering your vote with the system has never been printed up.

      * Not accessible. How do people missing vision or limbs use them?
      I may be misinformed here (I've always voted absentee) but is there any good way of doing that now? I would think a limbless person could touch a screen as easily as write on a piece of paper or punch a card.

      * Is the incredible expense and TCO of these machines justified? Paper ballots are practically free by comparison.
      Ok, I'm not one to say our government doesn't waste a lot of money on silly things. The idea is probably a one time expense that lasts long but I can't say that with a straight face. Maybe there are plans to use the machines for something else during the year?

      * What about absentee voting? What wacky "voting method of the future" can we come for that? well with machine voting it would be a lot easier to just store all the 'ballots' for each region and know peoples SSNs.
      Wouldn't it be nice to be able to walk to the nearest place of voting and get the proper ballot? Again, as someone who has always done absentee voting it'd be nice to be able to vote locally.

      Anyway, there's no way the system is foolproof but there's lots of ways it's not worse than the current system...

    3. Re:Misgivings by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      I'm definetly a techno-geek, but I'm also a pragmatist. Electronic voting isn't going to solve any more problems than it creates.

      While I agree that there will be problems, I do think that a move to electronic voting will help reduce the number of problems in voting. And the the problems you put forth, while valid concerns, are easily solved:

      * The hardware and software are proprietary and not open to public review. My paper has a full page copy of the ballots before every election so the public can review it.

      I would expect that the interface would be public knowledge, it would require a bit more space in your paper, but could be covered sufficiently. As for the source code being closed, I don't think this is really an issue as long as there is a paper trail to double check the results against. Also, I would expect that it could be required, by law, that the source code is reviewable by independent parties (with applicable NDA's of course). And, of course, keep in mind that even if the code is open source, it would be trivial for the company to compile from a modified code base which is not known about. If we're going to assume that there would be a big conspiracy to disenfranchise the voters, why stop with just the basic idea, let's give the Men in Black a bit of intellegence.

      * Not accessible. How do people missing vision or limbs use them?

      How do they currently vote with punch cards? For the blind, braile I would assume, this could be implimented on a special braile station. just create a dynamic braile interface to allow them to vote. The technology exists, remember the handshake over the internet story a few months back? As for the parapaligic, it would be a case of using the same type of mouth pusher that they use for many applications, could still use the touch screen.

      * How are the results audited? Do the electronic logs go into the public domain?

      The paper trail is treated just like it is today, its kept in locked boxes and audited according to the same practices. And, I like your idea, post the electronic results to a web site, whoever wishes to see them may.

      * Is the incredible expense and TCO of these machines justified? Paper ballots are practically free by comparison.

      This is, of course, a matter of opinion. I personally feel that the wrangling over Florida, and the long delay in having the election decided cost a lot of money, and created uncertainty in the financial markets. So I see the costs of a more reliable system as acceptable.

      * What about absentee voting? What wacky "voting method of the future" can we come for that?

      Until better comes along, this will probably have to be handled as it currently is, by mail in paper ballots (ScanTron), which would be counted by hand and read into the computer based system for tallying.

      I will agree, we need to be careful in how this done, but I don't think that an electronic based system could be any worse, or even as bad as the punch card systems used now.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
  31. Re:The mark of the beast is upon us! by eXtro · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Nice rant, I am sure it will be moderated up.

    The same argument could be made for the status quo of voting. The only way to make manual voting secure is to register every citizen, tatoo them and require a drop of blood for DNA testing before they enter the voting booth.

    Except that this doesn't really address security and neither does your rant. This assumes that the voters themselves will be trying to commit fraud. This happens. It's still nothing compared to the problems that happen when the government commits fraud. I'm not even referring to the normal allegations of miscounts in Florida.

    1. San Francisco Examiner
    2. American Civil Libterties Union
    3. Los Angeles Times (archived at globalechange.org, but I checked the article against LA Times' for-pay-archive)

    a href=

  32. Brazil by Gleef · · Score: 5, Informative

    National Semiconductor and Unisys (two American companies) made a really good electronic voting system for Brazil, they've been using them since 1996. It has a tamper resistant paper trail, so it is completely auditable, unlike most of the systems described in the article. From what I've heard, the machines work quite well, and people are happy with them. (Please, if someone has actually voted with these, share your experiences)

    I fail to see how having a paper trail with electronic voting is "dreaming", it strikes me more as "required", particularly if we want to consider our government democratic.

    --

    ----
    Open mind, insert foot.
    1. Re:Brazil by Gauchito · · Score: 2, Informative

      And to those other posters who are afraid electronic voting will subvert the democratic process, a nine-fingered man who started on the bottom rung of society just managed to achieve the highest post in the land. He didn't need a Harvard education or a rich dad. Sure, he had to try and try again (and try, and try :) ), but when a man with his roots makes it to the presidency, you know democracy is alive and well.

    2. Re:Brazil by ma2oliveira · · Score: 2, Informative
      REF: Electronic Voting - Brazil

      Greetings,

      I have used the system several times in the past years.

      Really straightforward: walk in (or wait in line), identity verification, sign receipt, walk to booth, terminal is authorized (using a remote wired keypad) by the election officer, type in candidate number (I believe one can scroll to the desired candidate, when the list is short), candidate info appears (photo [1], name, nickname, number, party), confirm, confirm again, in case of multiple elections (governor, senator), repeat process, walk out of booth, pick up receipt, walk home [2].

      I'll post some links when I find the time (they'll probably be in portuguese, though). Here's one off a senator's website, addressing possible security issues (it's a bit dated, pre-2002 elections).

      ---
      [1] this applies to the recent presidential elections, I don't recall if the photo appears when voting for town council representatives and other positions with a large number of candidates.

      [2] I live near my voting zone office, about 6 blocks away. And, voting days are national holidays (mandatory voting), so traffic is usually light.

      ---

      Marco A. Assfalk de Oliveira

    3. Re:Brazil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, National and Unisys have sell some voting machines (56.000) of a total of 450.000.
      Procomp/Interbold supplied voting machines before.

      The machine was designed to TRE, Justice Department that rules elections, thats owns the
      copyright.

      These machines was simple, using standard and cheaps technologies, and are simple to use and
      robust.

      The paper trail was used on some machines on the last election, and as the only moving part of it, was the main defect source.

      The only concern with these machine are that the rom code aren't public available, due to problems with vendor's copyrights, but are audited by well know and trusted Universities like Unicamp.

      The easy of use and speed of vote are atested by many brazilian elections, and now by recently by the last election on Paraguay

    4. Re:Brazil by leandrod · · Score: 2, Interesting
      > National Semiconductor and Unisys (two American companies) made a really good electronic voting system for Brazil, they've been using them since 1996.

      No, the original machines were made by Procomp. Please check your facts.

      > It has a tamper resistant paper trail, so it is completely auditable

      No, the original machine had. In the last election only a small percentage of the machines had the paper trail. Please double-check all your facts.

      > people are happy with them

      I am not. Source code was never properly audited, and next to no paper trail. I don't doubt the results, but had the election being more contested we'd have been in a full-scale fiasco. Had the situation won, the Left would still be complaining.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    5. Re:Brazil by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > These machines was simple, using standard and cheaps technologies

      MS Windows CE is anything but standard and cheap. Make it proprietary, non-standards-compliant, not-so-popular and expensive. The previous system was based on a proprietary VM DOS clone.

      > The paper trail was used on some machines on the last election, and as the only moving part of it, was the main defect source.

      Well, that is exactly one of the advantages of mechanics: unlike software, it tend to fail badly enough to be noted by humans. Software can introduce or allow all kinds of errors without anyone noticing.

      > The only concern with these machine are that the rom code aren't public available, due to problems with vendor's copyrights, but are audited by well know and trusted Universities like Unicamp.

      Far from being the only concern, since computer illiteracy and lack of audit trail were also big concerns. Also it was not the ROM code, but the whole system from firmware to application software, including MS WinCE in between, wasn't properly audited. Universities aren't trusted in Brazil, being underfunded and having generally low standards of achievement if compared to Europe, North America and Far East. And not "Universities", but several individuals representing Universities, companies and political parties were allowed only a few days in a clean room under NDA. IBM's representative even refused to sign the NDA, since it made the whole process innocuous.

      Search CIPSGA for more information, if you can read Portuguese (or Spanish, it's similar enough.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    6. Re:Brazil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did. Way better than paper.

    7. Re:Brazil by Gleef · · Score: 1

      I am sorry I wasn't clear on the full details, I knew there were multiple vendors involved in the Brazilian voting system, but NatSemi/Unisys was the only one I was able to confirm quickly. I did not say that the NatSemi/Unisys machines were the first ones used, merely that Brazil has been using electronic voting since 1996.

      Regarding paper trail, the original machines had a paper trail, the NatSemi/Unisys machines have a paper trail, and I recalled an article indicating that a paper trail was part of Brazil's specification for the machines. As you indicate, some of the machines don't have a paper trail, and I stand corrected. However, since some of the machines have a working paper trail, it still refutes the original article's point that those asking for a paper trail are "dreamers".

      I am sorry to hear that you aren't happy with the machines, but I'm glad that you shared it. Most of the articles I've read on the Brazillian system are either neutral technical articles or positive "Electronic Voting is Great" articles. Of course, no system is perfect, and it's important to see what the imperfections are, so mistakes aren't repeated.

      It sounds like the two of us would probably agree on what we want to see in such a system. Here's my list:
      * Well audited (software, kernel, hardware, and instructions to election monitors/officials)
      * Publically available source code and audits
      * Tamper resistant paper trail for recounts and fraud protection
      * Easy to use

      --

      ----
      Open mind, insert foot.
    8. Re:Brazil by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > the NatSemi/Unisys machines have a paper trail, and I recalled an article indicating that a paper trail was part of Brazil's specification for the machines.

      Part of the specification yes, but not widely deployed. The actual deployment of the ballot printer and container was something like 2-3%, not enough to warrant confidence in the election had it been contested.

      > some of the machines don't have a paper trail, and I stand corrected.

      So it was incorrect to say they had without qualifying it, and it is incorrect to say some don't have. To be more precise, most don't have it.

      Sorry about the nitpicking, but in security issues one must nitpick.

      And yes, now I can agree with you.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  33. Touch screens with printouts by dszd0g · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Any opinions on the following:

    When one goes to the polls, you do the signup sheet thing. They hand you a card with a barcode on it. The barcode is not tied to the voter in any way. Only the voter knows their number.

    Of course some algorithm would be used to generate the numbers and they would have large gaps. A good algorithm should prevent people bringing their own cards and hiding them in their pants, right? Smart chips could be used if people want to be paranoid (that would get expensive).

    You go to a machine, insert the card. You place your votes on a touch screen. The software confirms your votes. Then it prints the results onto the card.

    If you look at the card and see a mistake or for whatever reason, you go back to the main desk. They swipe the barcode, which cancels the vote and hand you a new card. If someone starts swiping invalid numbers the front desk is notified.

    One can then bring the card home. After the election you can enter the barcode and check to make sure the database matches what is printed on the card.

    This last one is important to me, because I feel it adds some accountability. If someone can get enough people to hand over their cards after an election an audit should be possible.

    I've been up all night so this probably has holes in it, but what do you think of the overall process?

    One could take the barcode thing a little farther and when the voter pamphlets are handed out there is a barcode printed on them that one can bring to the polls to make it easier for them to find the voter's name. One would still be required to sign (this isn't really any security, I assume it is allows some legal protection). If the voter does not have the barcode they would be required to provide some form of identification. I don't flat out like requiring identification, but this provides a way out.

    --
    This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
    1. Re:Touch screens with printouts by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You go to a machine, insert the card. You place your votes on a touch screen. The software confirms your votes. Then it prints the results onto the card.

      And how do you ensure that your vote for Joe actually went to Joe? The printed card? Or the code redirection, which sent your vote to Mary instead.

      You end up with 2 'votes'. The one printed on the card, and the one actually recorded. With no real way to ensure that they are the same. Even if you can check later. It's only a program telling you what it has been programmed to tell you.

      After the election you can enter the barcode and check to make sure the database matches what is printed on the card.

      In the collating process, malicious code could be inserted to flip every 25th vote for Joe to Mary. YOUR vote could be checked, and it still might report Joe. Or simply tell you it has recorded Joe. But the main election db could still record Mary.

    2. Re:Touch screens with printouts by aethermill · · Score: 1

      The magnetic card is unnecessary. After (or during) the election, a list of secret pin numbers and corresponding votes could be published to a web site as an XML file. Then anyone could write a program to determine who won.

      Prof. Dill points out that people might try to sell votes under such a system. But it seems to me you could avoid this danger by not providing the voters with documented proof of their pin.

      --
      European friends! It isn't "United States", it's THE United States
    3. Re:Touch screens with printouts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This ballot isn't secret! That means that you can prove (or be _forced_ to prove) who you voted for. Unfortuately, this is an inescapable contradiction in any electronic system: if voters can verify their votes after the fact, it isn't secret.

    4. Re:Touch screens with printouts by swillden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One can then bring the card home. After the election you can enter the barcode and check to make sure the database matches what is printed on the card.

      Any system which allows the voter to verify that their vote has been recorded correctly also allows someone else to coerce the voter into voting a particular way.

      I'd like to see this statement disproven, but I don't think it's possible.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    5. Re:Touch screens with printouts by shadowpuppy · · Score: 1

      What I've been wondering about recently is which of the 2 is more important. I'm currently leaning toward the audit trail being more important. I think it's easier to cheat the counting than it is to abuse enough individual voters.

    6. Re:Touch screens with printouts by Jellybob · · Score: 1

      If the developers are corrupt and start changing the program to give people votes whatever happens, then anything can happen.

      Just like if the people who count paper votes are corrupt and switch the ballot boxes... it's not much harder when you take into account the code review that would go on during a project like this.

    7. Re:Touch screens with printouts by weston · · Score: 1

      And how do you ensure that your vote for Joe actually went to Joe? The printed card? Or the code redirection, which sent your vote to Mary instead.

      There isn't any way to be absolutely sure of this, but the point of the card is that if there's any question, officials/experts can compare the record in the system with the second record -- and the second, printed record, is verifiable to anyone who knows how to read.

    8. Re:Touch screens with printouts by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Unless the existing votes are published instantly you can still prove how you voted in this system. Your boss who threatened to fire you if you didn't vote ABC sends you off at 9AM to vote. You come back at 9:45AM after voting. Your boss asks you to give him your PIN RIGHT NOW! Then he checks the list and the end of the day.

      If he didn't ask until the next day you could look up somebody who voted the "right way" and give your boss that PIN, knowing that you were able to vote your conscience. But you can't find out those PINs until after the election.

      I like the concept in general, but we need find a solution to this problem to use it. I still think the paper-audit-trail that drops into a ballot box is the best way of doing this. Of course, there is no way to find out after the fact if that box was tampered with (which you can find out using your PIN system). Still, I think that the existing controls on elections would tend to prevent this - usually all major parties have representives at the polls to ensure that no such tampering takes place.

    9. Re:Touch screens with printouts by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Why not just have a dumb paper audit trail which drops into a box when you pull the lever recording your vote? The only way to tamper is to physically swap the votes in the box. This is difficult to do on a large scale and there are existing controls designed to make it difficult to accomplish (such as party reps at the polls).

    10. Re:Touch screens with printouts by identity0 · · Score: 1

      I've never voted, so my expertise in this area is small, but the system you describe sounds good. You don't nessesarily need a bar code, though - a unique # on each vote card will do. Heck, you could probobly implement this system as an add-on to existing vote systems - the important part is that the voter takes home a copy or 'reciept', and that they can check that their vote was counted later.

    11. Re:Touch screens with printouts by Zak3056 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've been up all night so this probably has holes in it, but what do you think of the overall process?

      FWIW, I agree with you--I think your solution (which is almost identical to one I've thought about in the past) is probably the best solution to a real problem.

      I think the biggest hole in it though is the number you take home. We have a secret ballot for a reason--someone can put pressure on you to vote a certain way, but only YOU know how you actually voted. With a receipt that has a RECORD of your vote, the someone who is pressuring you can demand to see your barcode and lookup the results themselves.

      I can't think of any sensible way around this, save to do it the way they handle blood donations (i.e. you get TWO barcodes, one of which prodvides the real results, and the other returns entirely opposite results, and only you know which is real and which is fake.)

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    12. Re:Touch screens with printouts by sheldon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think it's far easier...

      The system we use in my county is to get a sheet of paper with the candidates listed and you circle the dots next to the names. Then you take your paper over to an optical reader and it sucks it in, even supposedly makes sure the ballot is accurately filled in.

      Ok, I think that system works.

      So now just put a touch screen like your suggesting... you put your paper in, and it fills it in with the results from the touch screen. This helps making voting easy, because the screen would have rules (you can only select two judges) and insures the ballots are filled in fully...

      But it also gives you a paper trail to audit, and a fall back if the machines fail.(back to pencils)

      I definately don't like the non-secret ballot aspect of your proposal. There's no need to take the ballot home.

    13. Re:Touch screens with printouts by swillden · · Score: 1

      What I've been wondering about recently is which of the 2 is more important. I'm currently leaning toward the audit trail being more important.

      I think that both are required for a trustworthy system.

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    14. Re:Touch screens with printouts by lommer · · Score: 1

      The other thing with this guys system is this: If a voter goes home, checks his vote, and it's not what he voted, what happen? Does the vote get changed to what he SAID he voted (bad idea, he can then vote with more info than other voters had), or, not quite as bad but still an election nono, does the vote get nullified (bad for the same reason). I fail to see the accountability here...

    15. Re:Touch screens with printouts by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      The printed vote record that you take home(which is a bad idea for other reasons) may or may not have any connection with the actual vote stored in the db.

      And the stored one is the one that is counted. The printed one is merely a warm fuzzy.

    16. Re:Touch screens with printouts by swillden · · Score: 1
      Good points. I agree that he shouldn't be allowed to change his vote, so the only reasonable response would be an investigation of the process by which his vote was collected and counted, to see where it might have gone awry so that it can be fixed for the next time. Given such a process, it seems like a handful of crackpots could really gum up the works and waste a lot of time and resources in tracking down false accusations of miscounted votes.

      The *purpose* of allowing someone to check their vote is, of course, to create confidence in the voting system, not really to fix the system or correct the counts (since the system is presumed to work). As such, in areas of the world that don't have a strong democratic tradition there might be a great deal of value in allowing people to check their votes and to verify that they were, in fact, counted correctly. However, those areas are probably also the ones where voter coercion is most likely.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    17. Re:Touch screens with printouts by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      I don't think that votes should be changed. It is to verify that the system works. If we find that the system is not working, we should find out why it is not working, and it should be fixed.

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
    18. Re:Touch screens with printouts by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      If one counts enough of the printed cards and it does not add up to the results from the database, then the audit fails. It would be quite possible to determine that the database has been tampered with.

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
    19. Re:Touch screens with printouts by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      In Re:Your proposal is Dangerous I came up with a similar idea.

      The problem with two sets of votes on the same card is that there are more than one choice for a vote. To avoid coercion the fake vote would need to be what the voter was told to vote. But allowing the voter to choose the fake votes would not solve the problem. The coercing agent could tell the voter, "I want you to enter this for the real vote and this for the fake vote." If you prevented the real and fake votes from matching, the coercing agent could have the voter use their first and second choices. They would not know if they got their first or second choices, but they would get one of the two. Neither could be what the voter wanted.

      So as I discussed in the other post, I think the only option is to allow the voter to come up with as many fake vote cards as they want. It does create problems with accounting as discussed in the other post.

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
  34. It matters what is true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "[Sorry, but the roadblocks thing is a persistent urban legend.]
    I suppose that's fine to think, if thinking that sort of thing really helps you to sleep better at night."


    Not my opinion or what I "think". It is actually what happened. Someone made up the roadblock story because they thought it would rile someone, and it sure did. Regardless of the fact that it is made up.

    It is like the story about the first President Bush never having seen any supermarket scanner before.

    1. Re:It matters what is true by realdpk · · Score: 1

      Yes, right, because the story about President George Bush not having seen a supermarket scanner before is exactly as relevant as police roadblocks on voting day.

      ???

  35. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Scaba · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...but this reporter is nervous about voting?

    He's nervous, beause with electronic voting, a paranoid, warmongering lunatic may be able to fix an election, get himself voted in, and start an aggressive campaign of pre-emptive...oh wait.

  36. The US government does NOT run elections by YetAnotherAnonymousC · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately, the US government runs its own elections, rather than a truely impartial third party

    An important point, though: the Federal government does NOT run any elections, period. Elections are the responsibility of the states. This was done on purpose so that the federal government could not rig elections for itself. Of course, as we've seen in practice, federal intrusion in state business has become so commonplace that federal action frequently affects state elections, from Federal voting rights acts to the 2000 presidential election. Of course, the ends could be said to justify the means for much of this federal interference. But there is a legitimate states' rights/federalism argument to be made against any federal interference in state elections.

    1. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by misterpies · · Score: 1

      And even the best division of responsibility (whether elections are run by the federal government, the states or a third party) can't stop interference when the person in charge of whoever's running the election is the elder brother of one of the top candidates...

      --
      The author of this post asserts his moral rights.
    2. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by benzapp · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to add as well, that the constitution doesn't even require direct election of the president. In the 19th century, there were quite a few states where the state legislature chose the delegates sent to the electoral college to elect the president. This was also true for senators as well. (before the 17th amendment was passed in 1919).

      It really is a recent change where pretty much all government officials are elected by the people in a direct fashion.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    3. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Elections are the responsibility of the states"

      About time Canada had such a system. Here the frenchman always wins... If the leaders of the english Canadian provinces had any brains, they'd call for the Elections Canada office to be scrapped and do the counting themselves like the individual american states do.

    4. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Elections are the responsibility of the states.

      Unless the state is FL.

    5. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and when the state is governed by the brother of the individual running for election, this division backfires.

    6. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      An important point, though: the Federal government does NOT run any elections, period. Elections are the responsibility of the states. This was done on purpose so that the federal government could not rig elections for itself.

      Similarly, ONE of the purposes of the electoral college is to help keep rigged elections in one or two populous states from swinging the presidential election (unless it's close, in which case it isn't as big a deal if it's wrong).

      Say candidate Y leads candidate X by N votes in the REAL popular vote. If the president were elected by the popular vote, a rigged election in one big state could produce an N+ error in favor of candidate X, completely swampin the actual difference. With the Electoral College system, no matter how corrupt a state gets it can, at the max, only swing its own electoral votes - which are roughly proportional to its population (with little states having a slight advantage).

      (Of course the MAIN purpose of the Electoral College is to keep a couple big states from running roughshod over the little states - as part of the original compromise that convinced the little states to join up. In order to get enough Electoral Votes to win, a presidential candidate has to be acceptable to people in both big and little states - appropriate for a single person charged with administering governmental machinery that affects the interest of all the people in all the states.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    7. Re:The US government does NOT run elections by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      If that was the purpose, it went completely wrong.

      As you know, states can choose how to apportion their electoral votes. Most do it by the winner tak all formula. Apparently, Maine appoints electors on the basis of who wins in each congressional district.

      Using the "winner take all" strategy, big states get LOADS of attention from presidential candidates. The reason is simple (as demonstrated in Florida) a few votes one way or another can sway the influence of THE ENTIRE state and push the election in your favor.

      If we want to minimalize the influence of large states. We should change the system so to a more proportional scheme. Maine's scheme is a decent approach. I would propose allocating votes based on the proportion of votes a candidate receives.

      The highest vote getter would take his electors first in proportion to their number. As you must round the numbers, the top vote getter gets a somewhat disproportionate share.

      So if you got 52% of the vote in a state with 4 electors, you would get 3 of the electors (you round up). The next highest vote getter would get the remaining 1.

      If the top vote receiver got 42% of the vote in a state with 10 electors he would receive 5 electors. If the next highest received say 25%, he would take 3 of the remaining electors (you round up). Then the next vote getter and so on.

      Such a scheme would:

      1) Retain the essential functions of the electoral college. We are indeed a republic and it should remain that way. States cast votes for the President not individuals. Individuals choose the electors.

      This system provides a vital "rounding" effect that makes the ultimate decision pretty simple. A direct electorate in a case such as the Nixon/Kennedy race would be an IMPOSSIBLE mess.

      2) Provide a pluralistic effect to the election. I live in Indiana. In Indiana voting a for a Democratic presidential candidate is effectively the same as not showing and voting (I'm sure that California Republicans feel the same way :-).

      A mere statistical majority in a state does not truly represent consent of the goverened. A minority votes must have a chance to count if they are in sufficient quantity to represent a majority for a portion of electors.

      Example, a minority voting 31% of the vote in a state with 3 electors would gain 1 of the 3 electors.

      3) Move the OBVIOUS voting power, resources, attention, pandering, clout and graft away from the large states and disperse in amongst ALL states.
      Since a small move in voters no longer will influence a LARGE CHUNK of electors, the smaller states become more strategic. Gaining single electors in multiple states would be better than gaining a single elector in a large state.

      Furthermore, I think such a system would truly "get the vote out" by bringing out those who feel (in many case rightfully) that their vote doesn't count. Such a system would be perfectly appropriate for house elections as well*.

      *Don't give me that "I can meet my rep" crap. That worked in 1790 but not today. TV is now the handshake of choice and every rep has so many constituents that he really doesn't even care to see you (unless you have a check for him) :-)

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  37. Casting of Risk by Effugas · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's pretty simple, really.

    The threat model that the voting machine manufacturers want to work with is: "Given a particular system, how likely is it that it will get hacked?".

    The real threat model is substantially different: "Given a particular system, how likely is it that it will be accused of having been hacked, and how damaging will that accusation be?" Much different scenario. Accusations, and the credibility they carry, are directly rebutted by evidence to the contrary. The simple availability of an irrevocable audit trail prevents challenges -- "they might be able to prove us wrong, so we better not challenge the results of the election."

    No evidence, no risk of accusation, no credibility for the election.

    None deserved, too.

    Disclaimer: I _am_ a security engineer. This isn't a technical problem, it's a sociological one. Counting is easy.

    Yours Truly,

    Dan Kaminsky
    DoxPara Research
    http://www.doxpara.com

    1. Re:Casting of Risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said:

      "Disclaimer: I _am_ a security engineer. This isn't a technical problem, it's a sociological one. Counting is easy."

      No, I'm pretty sure you're a bluegrass singer.
      Played with Alison Krauss.
      Did the "I'm a man of constant sorrow" version
      for the movie O, Brother, Where Art Thou?

  38. Paper is more tamper resistant. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Mr. Terwilliger said that Sequoia was willing to share its source code, provided viewers sign nondisclosure agreements. But he questioned the need for a paper-based audit trail. "What's so great about a piece of paper?'' he said. "I can tamper with a piece of paper with a pencil or pen. All I need is physical access and I can tamper with the election."

    Why is he ignoring the obvious: Yes, but you can tamper with paper, but realistically, how long does it take you to modify even 1000 paper votes?

    Now, how long does it take you to modify 1000 electronic votes? Or 1000000?

  39. Printout by Cackmobile · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think a printout is whats needed. THe touch screen is only there to simplify choices for people so u don't get a mix up like in Florida. Its there to help illterates and others. Its not there to do the actual voting. If u had the touch screen which produced a printout, which the voter checks then puts into the ballot box. Then nothing can has to be stored on the computer. You could make each one stand alone and print onto special paper that changes each time. Of course nothing is perfect but its a start.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  40. moron DOWting elections, & warning SCO users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's right, if there even is an election, ucann bet your .asp it'll be as FUDged as placebo. it's all so georgewellian, don't you think?

    as for you Godless corepirate stock markup felons; your last gasper/litigatorIE demise is just another example of what folks can do quite well without.

    lookout bullow. run for your options, should you have any left? consult with yOUR creator often regarding matters of the heart/mind/wallet. that's the spirit.

  41. Perhaps nVidia�s driver team� by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...can create some sort of audit trail.

  42. If Lady, If by Irvu · · Score: 1

    "I think that any voting system, if it is programmed and used properly, can be very reliable," she added.

    <rant>
    I think that this, like many other issues, is something that we at /. need to comment on. For good or ill we are the pople who know just how hard it is to ensure that systems are always programmed and used *properly* especially when you users include every regestered voter in the U.S.

    The fact that people feel more confident about them says nothing about how tamper-proof or accurate they really are. The fact that they are made by private companies means that they have economic interests behind them. Private companies have a tendency to care who does and does not win elections.

    I think that it is incumbent upon us to speak out about this to the wider world beyond /. Even if we think that this is a good thing I think that it is time for some good old fashined letters to the editor.
    </rant>

  43. First they came from the communists.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let them come for the communists. They are genocidal monsters anyway.

    This will save the others.

    The Jews? The communists were quite anti-semitic (Stalin's Doctor's Plot, Soviet policy toward Israel and refuseniks, the Sandinista pogrom).

    Trade unionists? That is one of the first things they do (ban independent unions). The dictator of Venezuela is trying at this time.

    Catholics and protestants? The communist regimes typically commit many abuses of those who do not have the government's mandated religion.

    ---------

    Let them come for the communists. They certainly will not "speak up" for anyone, except to speak up for mass murder of these other groups.

  44. Poor article... by Goonie · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This strikes me as a classic example of how "getting quotes from both sides" does not a fair and accurate article make.

    The key points that opponents of electronic voting make are that a) there might be flaws in the system either by error or by design, b) that the machines cannot be easily inspected to check their operations, and c) that without a paper trail there is no way to check after the fact whether the votes were correctly counted or not.

    The response from a voting machine manufacturer, however, is classic obfuscation:

    "I think the concerns being raised are 100 percent valid," Mr. Terwilliger said. "However, they're being raised by people who have little idea about what actually goes on."

    At this point, the question arises - why are these critics wrong? What are they not understanding about the system? Rather than following up on this point, though, the reporter takes a completely different, and totally irrelevant tack, discussing public confidence in the machines. So what? Lots of people probably think that Microsoft invented the Internet. It doesn't make it true. The only conclusion I can come to is that the journalist did not take the time to understand the issue properly, and just got quotes from "both sides" and that was good enough.

    Do experts in other fields (if I may be so bold as to count myself an "expert" in it) get as frustrated with journalists, or is it just a particular problem with science and tech journalism?

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    1. Re:Poor article... by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
      Do experts in other fields (if I may be so bold as to count myself an "expert" in it) get as frustrated with journalists, or is it just a particular problem with science and tech journalism?

      You are not alone. If you are still in college (or still facing starting it) by any chance, take a journalism course as a general ed elective. I did because I like writing and wanted to try something other than short stories. It was an eye opener about the sorts of people who major in journalism (by the end of the semester you know who's who). There was a large contingent of opinionated "crusader" types deeply steeped in ideology (which I personally rank as a mental illness).

      --
      --- Ban humanity.
    2. Re:Poor article... by isorox · · Score: 1

      of people probably think that Microsoft invented the Internet. It doesn't make it true

      Of course not. Al Gore created the internet! ;)

    3. Re:Poor article... by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Is it the journalists?

      Or the people who fall for the word plays.

      Watch Whitehouse press conferences... they generally run like this:

      Q: "How do you plan on funding this initiative? Many of it's critics have questioned that it is even possible or wise to absord these costs ino the present fiscal year."

      A: "I realize that some people disagree. The President chooses not to disagree. Next question please."

      It's just downright ludicrous at it's core, but the public accepts these answers without question. The journalists are market driven, they just give the public what it wants.

    4. Re:Poor article... by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      As a journalist (a tech journalist, mind you), I think I know what the problem might be.
      You are an expert in the computer field. But an article, generally speaking, should not be directed to the expert. Not even to the average reader. It's geared toward the lowest common denominator. The editor's point of view usually runs along the lines of "anyone should read this article once and get it".
      Good, then we have to make a really in-depth exposé, right? Wrong. Then again, the editor: "In exactly 800 words".
      This is a gross generalization, and does not excuse flagrant errors or carelessness. But remember that it is downright impossible to write a story that everyone will like (it is even harder as your readers increase).
      And for a parting consideration: You will never like a tech article in a general interest publication, for exactly the same reason that a LOTR ubergeek will not enjoy the Peter Jackson films. Because they know better, and don't try to understand that the article (film) is directed toward a less knowing audience.

    5. Re:Poor article... by Goonie · · Score: 1
      As a journalist (a tech journalist, mind you)

      So you regurgitate press releases for a living, then?

      I don't know you, your work, or the outlet for your work, but the amount of lazy journalism I see in the tech sections of the dailies just beggars belief. It's probably gone down a little now that the volume of tech articles has decreased, but, still, it's pretty woeful. The specialist tech press is a different issue. It's still got serious problems, mind you.

      Care to comment?

      --

      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
      --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    6. Re:Poor article... by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      So you regurgitate press releases for a living, then?

      Way to start an intelligent discussion. Ad hominem plus uninformed opinion rolled in a short sentence. Nice.

      I don't know you, your work, or the outlet for your work,

      Which didn't stop you from emmiting an insulting opinion on my work. Again, nice.

      but the amount of lazy journalism I see in the tech sections of the dailies just beggars belief. It's probably gone down a little now that the volume of tech articles has decreased, but, still, it's pretty woeful.

      There is lazy journalism in every section of the dailies; you just notice it in the tech section because it is your specialty. See my previous comment on the fictional LOTR ubergeek.
      There is also good journalism (I dare say, most of it), but it gows unsung, for exactly the same reasons nobody congratulates a sysadm on a server that doesn't crashes. It's expected.
      Now, if a server crashes and you start shouting about how all sysadmins are lazy bastards, you'll get a lot of odd looks and maybe a quick kick in the ass. That's how we feel when you point at a bad story and start screaming "all reporters are shit!".
      Plus, read my original post. What you attribute to laziness is often an honest attempt to write the story at a level that is understandable to everyone. Yes, Joe Sixpack, reading it on his pickup truck on the way to a poaching spot, should be able to understand it on the first read. You try to do that sometimes in 1000 words or less and come back to tell me how lazy we are.
      Then again, some journalists are lazy. And some Linux geeks are fat, virgin bastards living in their parents basements, and you won't go around saying that all of them are. Right?

      The specialist tech press is a different issue. It's still got serious problems, mind you.

      Most of my points won't apply to specialist tech press, and it's a lot harder to excuse lack of depth in those articles.
      All I'm saying is, not every mistake or lack of depth in a story comes down to "lazy journalist" or "stupid reporter".
      Remember the old saying: Never attribute to malice what can be attributed to stupidity. And don't attribute to stupidity what can be attributed to a deadline, a 1000 words limit and an editor who keeps repeating "simpler, dammit, make it simpler".

  45. Using the FOIA to view code? by Dan+Crash · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article:
    Dr. Dill argued, however, that if voting machines were really secure, then voters would be able to see the insides of their "proprietary" technology. "If someone really has a tamper-resistant machine, they should tell you enough about how the machine works so you can assure yourself that the machine works," he said. "We don't know what the weaknesses are. We don't know who the people are that control that stuff."

    Mr. Terwilliger said that Sequoia was willing to share its source code, provided viewers sign nondisclosure agreements.
    So if I look at the code, I can't talk about it? Grrrreat.

    I'd like to see someone file a Freedom of Information Act request to see the code. The FOIA applies to the following documents:

    552. Public information; agency rules, opinions, orders, records, and proceedings

    (a) Each agency shall make available to the public information as follows:

    (1) Each agency shall separately state and currently publish in the Federal Register for the guidance of the public--

    (A) descriptions of its central and field organization and the established places at which, the employees (and in the case of a uniformed service, the members) from whom, and the methods whereby, the public may obtain information, make submittals or requests, or obtain decisions;

    (B) statements of the general course and method by which its functions are channeled and determined, including the nature and requirements of all formal and informal procedures available;

    (C) rules of procedure, descriptions of forms available or the places at which forms may be obtained, and instructions as to the scope and contents of all papers, reports, or examinations;

    (D) substantive rules of general applicability adopted as authorized by law, and statements of general policy or interpretations of general
    applicability formulated and adopted by the agency; and

    (E) each amendment, revision, or repeal of the foregoing.
    I know there are arguments against this, specifically that the code is the intellectual property of a private business, and that it is protected by both US Copyright laws and the Berne Convention, but I'd like to see the courts wrestle with this one just the same. Knowing how our votes are counted is one of the sacred founding principles of democracy, and personally, I think it trumps any other interests in this case.

    Unfortunately, this has little to no chance of succeeding while Ashcroft is Attorney General, since he's declared an effective moratorium on FOIA requests while he is in office.

    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  46. Isn't this the same NYTimes that had fabricated by BoomerSooner · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    stories.

    Hmmmmm... integrity lost. Oh wait, you cannot lose what you don't have.

  47. Why is _paper_ necessary? by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

    I don't see why voting has to involve a slip of paper. Why not have a line of buckets, one for each candidate, and you drop a small token into one of the buckets (or more than one, depending on your electoral system). To preserve confidentiality there would need to be a slot through which you drop the token, to stop you reaching in and removing some or looking to see who's had the most votes so far. Then counting votes is just weighing the buckets (and checking for invalid tokens).

    --
    -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    1. Re:Why is _paper_ necessary? by gpinzone · · Score: 4, Funny

      And when you hear a token hit the bucket bottom with a hollow, bassy sound, you know the person just voted for the Communist party. Arrest him!

    2. Re:Why is _paper_ necessary? by slafleur · · Score: 1

      And when you hear a token hit the bucket bottom with a hollow, bassy sound, you know the person just voted for the Communist party. Arrest him!

      Either that or Qbert just fell off the stairs.

    3. Re:Why is _paper_ necessary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about here, but in my country you have the right not to show who you're voting for (so when we vote we're supposed to take one slip for each candidate so people don't know which slip we'll actually use).
      I don't see how you could do that with your system.

  48. NYT? by wolf- · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Um, like the old grey lady has any credibility at this point.
    Troll? No, legitimate comment on the credibility of a "source" of information.

    --
    ----- LoboSoft specializes in Digital Language Lab
    1. Re:NYT? by Rudeboy777 · · Score: 1

      Um, like the old grey lady has any credibility at this point. Troll? No, legitimate comment on the credibility of a "source" of information.

      While this is absolutely true, I am grateful that, at the very least, this article will raise some public awareness of the dangers of electronic voting. Something us Slashdotters have known of for some time.

      --

      From hell's heart I fstab at /dev/hdc

    2. Re:NYT? by wolf- · · Score: 1

      And with you, I will agree.

      If my company doesn't trust its entire bookeeping system to a solely electronic accounting system, what makes me trust that an electronic voting system is infallible? Here in Georgia, we did not see the volume of problems that other states had had with electronic voting. The "success" of the transition is owed to the Georgia Secretary of State's terrific education program. Educate the voters, multiple times. I would have liked to have a nice little receipt stating time and date that I voted. An assurance that the transaction was successful, so to speak.

      As an aside, while the objectivity of the NYT in regard to social and political issues can be questioned, their articles on technology are more often on track.

      --
      ----- LoboSoft specializes in Digital Language Lab
    3. Re:NYT? by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      Yep, one bad reporter will cancel the good work of 350 others. And over 100 years of good journalism.
      Troll.

  49. They didn't happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They did not happen. The citations you will typically find come from editorial/opinion (not news) sites like indymedia, which like to make stuff up.

    The people who defend these lies will be quick to bring up a silly conspiracy theory about the fictions being "censored" from the public media.

  50. Bartcop by Rudeboy777 · · Score: 3, Informative

    For a glimpse into the potential repercussions of the Diebold e-voting machines used in the last federal election look here.

    WARNING: This is really unsettling stuff and may cause you to lose (more) faith in the U.S. election system.

    --

    From hell's heart I fstab at /dev/hdc

    1. Re:Bartcop by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1
      Good article. Particularly disturbing is the fact that these machines are being produced by strongly partisan companies. When they say "trust us", we should at least ask who are we trusting? and are they impartial?.

      Some of these manufacturers are clearly suspicious. They need to prove themselves. That they refuse to do so should make us assume the worst.

  51. Paper is more tamper resistant.... the "chad" by adzoox · · Score: 2, Informative
    Exactly, and you can also argue with paper as they did in the presidential election about "improperly punched chads".

    Womever you wanted to win or thought should win, the recount was unconstitutional in the way it was ordered. It was also unfairly counted because anything that had an "improperly" punched chad was disgarded, which tended be more Bush votes discarded. (Not that I wanted either side to become victorious down to such an infantile issue.)

    The real reliability = "Integrity and Honesty of the System" ... unfortunately that will never be 100% - I think computerized voting with printouts (like an ATM receipt) of each vote and then the voter taking that vote and placing it in a ballot box. If a hand recount needs to take place you can do so.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    1. Re:Paper is more tamper resistant.... the "chad" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sorry for the poor grammar in that post ... rewrite:

      You can also argue with paper as they did in the presidential election about "improperly punched chads". Whomever you wanted to win or thought should win, the recount was unconstitutional in the way it was ordered. It was also unfairly counted because anything that had an "improperly" punched chad was discarded, which tended to be more Bush votes. (Not that I wanted either side to become victorious down to such an infantile issue.)

      The real reliability = "Integrity and Honesty of the System" ... unfortunately that will never be 100% - I think there should be computerized voting with printouts (like an ATM receipt) of each vote and then the voter taking that vote and placing it in a ballot box. If a hand recount needs to take place you can do so.

      Addendum: Couldn't the votes also be backed up somehow like with a NAS - I don't see how having 3 ways of backup would be any more secure.

    2. Re:Paper is more tamper resistant.... the "chad" by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      It was also unfairly counted because anything that had an "improperly" punched chad was disgarded, which tended be more Bush votes discarded.

      Where do you get that? The data from NORC indicates that vastly more Gore votes weren't counted. Under certain recounting schemes (including ironically the one Gore's lawyers wanted to use) Bush would have won. Under the full-state recount ordered by the Florida Supreme Court but stopped by the feds, Gore would have won. CNN lied to you.

      Here's NORC.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  52. Yea, our "horrible system"..... by mao+che+minh · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Yea, our "horrible system" has created one of the most free societies in history. This horrible system beckons millions to our shores in pursuit of a better life, to live in a country where they actually have a political voice. This horrible system insures that no tyrant or dictatorship could ever take power. This horrible system protects the minority while respecting the majority.

    This horrible system helped my father escape a terrible life in a foreign land. This horrible system helped my father later free my grand parents from a terrible life in a foreign land. If it wasn't for this horrible system, I would not be alive to be writing this post.

    P.S.: all across America people vote in a great number of elections on all government levels each year. Unless there is a serious security concern, there is not even a police prescence at the ballots. I know that in many foregin/poor/weaker nations they tell you all sorts of bad things about us. Just remember that it is a politician telling you those things. It's called propaganda.

    1. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your family's actual personal experiences do not agree with what indymedia claims based on their hatred of America, so prepare for mod-down.

    2. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by HiThere · · Score: 3, Interesting

      We had a great system. Unfortunately, it was based on having a frontier. It was based on accountability. Now both of those are missing, and the system is rapidly declining in quality.

      Without the frontier, you can't run away from an intolerable situation. (The frontier was hostile and difficult, so the only people who went there were those who found the system where they lived intolerable..for one reason or another.)

      Without accountability, one can't keep corruption in check. Without a check on corruption, trust rapidly falls. Without trust, economic growth first stagnates and then crumbles. (Well, technology is a strong preventative to that last...perhaps strong enough. Unfortunately, we'll see.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by sbillard · · Score: 1

      More people voted for the first "American Idol" than during the 2000 presedential elections.

    4. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Yea, our "horrible system" has created one of the most free societies in history. This horrible system beckons millions to our shores in pursuit of a better life, to live in a country where they actually have a political voice. This horrible system insures that no tyrant or dictatorship could ever take power. This horrible system protects the minority while respecting the majority.

      You know, it's very hard to tell whether you're being sarcastic, satirical, or serious. I hope you're not being serious.

      I don't know what it looks like from the inside, but those of us who don't live in the US look across the Atlantic and see a country where the head of state got in as a result of a fraudulent election run by his own brother; where civil rights are being progressively torn up and destroyed; which breaks solemn international treaties as if they didn't matter.

      Wake up and smell the coffee! It looks to the rest of us asi if a tyrant has very successfully seized power over you, as a result of a minority riding roughshod over the interests of the majority.

      As President Mugabe of Zimbabwe said, no foreign observer could possibly have found the last presidential election in the United States 'Free and Fair'. And he's a man who knows a lot about how to 'run' a democracy.

      --
      I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
    5. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guantanamo Bay.

    6. Re:Yea, our "horrible system"..... by mpe · · Score: 1

      I don't know what it looks like from the inside, but those of us who don't live in the US look across the Atlantic

      Not just across the Atlantic, also plenty of people looking in across the Pacific and North of the US/Canada border.

      and see a country where the head of state got in as a result of a fraudulent election

      Even if not actually fraudulent the whole thing cam over as farce. Especially given that since the US president dosn't take office for several months there hardly seemed to be any reason to hurry about anything. Nor did anyone in the US apparently even consider the idea of voiding the election and re-balloting.

  53. The off by one error that ruled the world by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

    Seriously, it'd be so easy to cheat with a system like this. Do people in favor of this know how powerful computers are?

    I don't mind using scanners to count faster, but the day I have to vote online is the day I move to Canada.

    --
    "I only speak the truth"
    Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
  54. United States election scam by smack_attack · · Score: 0

    Even if you vote for your candidate and he garners the most votes, well, hang on to your boots because he doesn't win.

    How is that supposed to instill confidence in the election system?

    America has become a nation where we hope that last year's fuckups will be shadowed by this year's redemption. And we are continuously being let down. I guess if everyone waves a little American flag and goes out and buys shit to support the economy that will make up for the looting that is going on behind the scenes. /semi-rant

    1. Re:United States election scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Even if you vote for your candidate and he garners the most votes, well, hang on to your boots because he doesn't win.
      George Bush did receive the most votes.
    2. Re:United States election scam by clarkc3 · · Score: 1

      but if I recall from my history class, their has been at least 1 instance of presidents who won while recieving less of the popular vote (ironically, Florida was controversal then too - look up the 1876 election and you'll see) - its actually easy to do in theory, win the big states (population wise) in a close race, and get blown out in the smaller populated states

  55. Has been like that in Belgium for years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    We have voted in belgium electronically for years now, never had any problems at all. The source code of their app is even available online. http://www.verkiezingen.fgov.be/Logiciel/Jites/NL/ Cdoku1.htm
    They even have a flash example of the electronic vote, and organise tryout sessions for the elderly people who fear everything that has a screen connected to it ;-)

    1. Re:Has been like that in Belgium for years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For french speaking, there is a web site telling about the BAD situation in Belgium: http://www.poureva.be/
      The source code provided for Belgium is full of missing piece replaced by //Confidentiel/Confidentieel//.
      There is no way to make sure this is the code really used durring the election.
      Most citizen need to trust expert choosen by the people in power for checking the code and code really in use. Those 9 experts (when they are all comming/selected) don't have the time to check everything and can only analyse what they receive. When they make remarks or have doubt, the thing they propose are not implemented.
      I have documented many thing (in french) on http://wiki.ael.be/index.php/VoteElectronique and a few thing in English (http://wiki.ael.be/index.php/ElectronicVoting)
      I have a nice quote from RMS for the peaple that want the program to be Free Software: http://wiki.ael.be/index.php/VoteElectroniqueEtLog icielLibre
      So what... are you happy with our e-democracy? Do you think ticketting is enough? Do you trust the peaple in power to organise free election... today... tomorrow... for ever?
      David GLAUDE Web master of PourEVA: Pour une Ethique du Vote Automatisé.

  56. OT: Supreme Court vs. computer ballots by cwernli · · Score: 1

    Sorry, didn't want to confuse anybody here. I simply think it's easier to blame a body of humans than a machine.

    Plus there's another twist to it: the process of taking action (if you are so inclined). It's a lot more satisfactory to shoot the members of the Supreme Court than to punch a hole into a machine.

  57. Mandatory Simpsons reference by stud9920 · · Score: 0, Redundant
    Paul Terwilliger, [...], one of the largest manufacturers of electronic systems, said that [...] complaints about machines like his company's were uninformed.

    Hey, the guy is related to Sideshow Bob (Robert Terwilliger), who rigged the Springfield elections against mayor Quinby, by having the deads vote. Don't trust him !
    1. Re:Mandatory Simpsons reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sideshow Bob (Robert Terwilliger), who rigged the Springfield elections against mayor Quinby, by having the deads vote. Don't trust him !

      "i don't get it. why would one convicted felon get so many more votes than another convicted felon" (lisa)

  58. Dumb by Rutje · · Score: 0

    It doesn't matter. Most voters are far too dumb to vote, leading to insignificant results. How else can such a moron become president?

    --

    I want my karma, and I want it now!
  59. Voter confidence? by trigeek · · Score: 1

    To quote the article: "70 percent of voters in the state's November 2002 elections...reported being very confident that their vote was accurately counted" Since when does voter confidence have any correlation with how secure/reliable the system is? The vast majority of the voters consider computers some sort of "magical" technology, and understand very little about how they work, or, more importantly, how they are programmed.

    --
    Sometimes I doubt your committment to SparkleMotion!
  60. Moore sheds no light by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You must talkt to a bunch of knucklehead pro-war people who have never read his books or seen his movies"

    I've read his books (including his recent racist rant) and seen his movies: he is a knucklehead who makes things up, plays very fast and loose with facts, and only sheds light on how he has no idea what is going on.

    I remember years ago when he ran a small newspaper that was mostly a rant against workers rights.

    Pro-war? When it comes to Iraq, he is pro-war. His opponents are more anti-war than he is. Michael Moore is one of those who has protested in favor of Saddam's rule and his war against Iraq which has killed hundreds of thousands of people. He did not want Bush to end this war....a war that Bush ended against Moore's wishes.

    1. Re:Moore sheds no light by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Up to your last paragraph, I am in complete agreement.

  61. Electronic voting and air gaps by Millennium · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only way you can possibly make electronic voting machines acceptably secure is to not network them at all. This isn't so much a measure to prevent hacking as it is a measure to control the amount of damage a hacker can do; if only one machine at a time can be hacked, then damage remains localized. Here's my idea for such a system:

    • The user shows up at the polling place, and is given a token, which will be used to operate the voting machine. The user then goes to one of several voting booths, which can be chosen at random.
    • The user presents the token to the machine, which marks that token as used (such that it can never be used to operate another machine). Only then is the user allowed to begin the voting process.
    • The user chooses a language for onscreen text and voice instructions. Ideally, instructions should be phrased in such a way that they can be reused between elections.
    • The user is presented with a list of candidates, including names and pictures. One by one, each candidate is highlighted; as this occurs, a voice sample is played of the candidate saying his or her name. This is important, because it allows for a person to recognize the proper candidate based on written name, picture, spoken name, and sound of voice. This is pretty much everything that can reasonably be done to ensure that a person knows which candidate is being voted for.
    • The vote can be controlled in two ways: by touching the candidate's name onscreen, or by pressing a button as that candidate's name is being read. This latter is a measure to accommodate blind voters., or others who could not effectively use a touch screen.
    • Each vote is confirmed twice, onscreen and by voice -again using the sample of the candidate- to ensure that the voter is absolutely certain that this is the proper choice.
    • Once the voting process is completed, a paper ballot is printed for the user (there will be strong warnings onscreen and in voice to ensure that the user understands to take the ballot). This ballot is marked with a barcode stating what machine it came from, but no information which could identify the user (this is why it is important to let the user pick a booth at random). The purpose of this barcode is so that if a machine is known to be tampered with, votes cast using that machine can be tracked down.
    • The ballot is then taken by the user to a ballot box, where it will be shipped to the usual facilities for counting purposes.

    The advantages to this system are many:

    • Every possible method of recognizing candidates is taken into account. This won't totally eliminate confusion -some people are so monumentally stupid that nothing will get through to them- but this minimizes that problem.
    • There is a paper trail which can be consulted. The value of this cannot be overestimated.
    • There is no single point of failure. Tampering with a single machine cannot in and of itself damage any other machines, so the number of votes which must be considered suspect due to machine tampering is minimized.
    • Counting is still done by machines, which are not prone to bias as humans are, but because the ballot os filled out by machine, the process is somewhat more controlled.

    And one final note, particular to US elections: poll results should be considered classified information until the polls are closed in all fifty states. Timezones being what they are, this exit-poll crap is causing election results in East Cost states to affect West Coast states, however slightly, and that needs to be dealt with. Each state's results must be completely independent of the results of any other state, and measures need to be taken to ensure that.

    1. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by Jonathan_S · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Each vote is confirmed twice, onscreen and by voice -again using the sample of the candidate- to ensure that the voter is absolutely certain that this is the proper choice.

      And everyone in the voting station will know who that person voted for becuase the machine just read the names of the selected candates out loud.

      Votes are suppost to be private. There should be no way that even someone standing outside the voting booth can tell who you just voted for.

    2. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny ... this is how they worked here in Kansas. We must be ahead of the rest of the states -- especially ones in the east and west who view us as backward. Silly backward city folk.

    3. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by Mike1024 · · Score: 1

      Hey,

      Each vote is confirmed twice, onscreen and by voice

      I might miss out the voice confirmation. It's got to be a secret ballot, and if people can overhear your selection, it wouldn't be.

      Just my $0.02,

      Michael

      --
      "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    4. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      particular to US elections: poll results should be considered classified information until the polls are closed in all fifty states

      This wouldn't help the problem we have here at all because the pre-close information the media use is based on "exit polls" where voters are asked how they voted. Actual counting in most states begins when the polls close.

      --
      -- $G
    5. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by David_W · · Score: 1
      And everyone in the voting station will know who that person voted for becuase the machine just read the names of the selected candates out loud.

      Yeah, I thought of that too... hopefully Millennium just forgot to mention the machines would be using headphones.

    6. Re:Electronic voting and air gaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really good system. Just add the ability to look up your counted vote on the mainframe using the barcode to make sure it was counted correctly. That way if the vote was miscounted you could contest it.

  62. And in response. . . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

    The Federal Election Commission held hearings, asking people who had been unfairly denied the right to vote to come forward and testify.

    The results: nobody testified.

    On the OTHER hand, one of the two major parties DID put forth a concerted effort to invalidate the absentee ballots of a great many servicemen and women, on the demonstrably false assumption that the vast majority would vote for the "other party".

    Mind you, if the group was just Military **OFFICERS**, it would probably be a good assumption. But overall, it was unfounded.

    1. Re:And in response. . . . by swillden · · Score: 1

      Mind you, if the group was just Military **OFFICERS**, it would probably be a good assumption. But overall, it was unfounded.

      Even among the enlisted ranks, Democrats tend to be a definite minority. And this is in spite of the fact that the armed services are populated by large numbers of minorities who typically vote Democrat.

      Never having been an officer, I wouldn't know what the breakdown is among commission holders, but my impression is that the officer corps is, if anything, more left-leaning than the enlisted ranks.

      Of course, IMO, the votes of members of the armed services should count double, not be ignored, particularly with respect to presidential elections. Not because they vote Republican but because they have a very direct, personal interest in the direction of their nation's foreign policy.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    2. Re:And in response. . . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 1
      The officer corps, at least in the company- and field-grade ranks, is overwhelmingly conservative and nowadays, even openly Republican. With a growing group of large- and small-l Libertarians. Back in my days as an officer (1984-89), Party affiliation was only "allowed" if your state did not allow yo to otherwise participate in Primary Elections.

      These days, from my recent experience, an officer being openly Republican is accepted, if not the norm. . .

      The GENERAL-OFFICER ranks differ from this pattern, but generally only AFTER retirement. . .

    3. Re:And in response. . . . by Arandir · · Score: 1

      but because they have a very direct, personal interest in the direction of their nation's foreign policy.

      If we denied people to right to vote because of conflict of interest, not many people would be allowed to vote. Do we also deny people in the defense industry? What about those janitors who sweep the floors of the defense industry? Are those receiving direct funding from the government (at any level) eligible, such as welfare recipients, social security recipients, teachers, firemen?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    4. Re:And in response. . . . by swillden · · Score: 1

      The officer corps, at least in the company- and field-grade ranks, is overwhelmingly conservative and nowadays, even openly Republican. With a growing group of large- and small-l Libertarians.

      Thanks for the info. That doesn't surprise me at all, but it's still not clear to me that the officers are more conservative than enlisted (wo)men. My impression is that the enlisted ranks are even more overwhelmingly conservative.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    5. Re:And in response. . . . by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Ok, now I'm pissed off. This is the second maroon making this claim.

      "The Federal Election Commission held hearings"

      I can find no evidence from searching google that the FEC held any such hearings.

      The US Commission on Civil Rights held hearings and many people came to testify.

      http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/vote2000/report/main.h tm

      I want to see the report you are citing. I'm really really getting tired of people making up shit to try to prove points.

  63. It needs to be open by Ripplet · · Score: 5, Interesting
    There's (allegedly) a good example already of how electronic voting can be abused.

    1996: Chuck Hagel wins "stunning upsets" in both primaries and the general election in Nebraska.

    2002: Chuck Hagel gets reelected in a landslide, with 83% of the vote.

    A single company programmed, installed and largely operated the machines that counted about 80 percent of those votes.

    This company used to be headed by, and is still part-owned by, you guessed it, Chuck Hagel.

    Coincidence, yeah right.

    Oh, one more thing. Charlie Matulka, who lost the 2002 election, requested a hand count of the vote. His request was denied because Nebraska has a just-passed law that prohibits government-employee election workers from looking at the ballots, even in a recount. The only machines permitted to count votes in Nebraska are those made and programmed by the corporation formerly run by Hagel. Hmm, wonder who pushed that one through!

    Matulka's comment:"If you want to win the election, just control the machines."

    (most of the above info shamelessly plagiarised from that last link).

    Now, this doesn't mean that you can't use electronic voting, just that the whole process needs to be completely open and exposed. The source code needs to be open, the hardware design needs to be open, you need independant and unbiased people to check that the open source code is actually what is running on the open hardware, the whole thing needs an open audit trail in the event that a recount is required etc. The whole process is a helluvalot more complicated than just a machine that counts votes. So people need to be given proof that their votes are not corrupted in any step of that process.

    --

    Skiing? Check out The Independant Skiers Portal

  64. went to go buy a pickup.. by zogger · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... told the used truck salesman I needed a V-8, had to carry heavy stuff and tow a trailer once in awhile.

    He said, "here's one".

    Cool, I go to pop the hood, can't. The hood is welded shut!

    What's this? I ask, I can't see the engine?

    No, you can't.

    How do I know it's a v-8?

    Because we sayso.

    But I want to look!

    You can't.

    How do I know you aren't lying?

    You can ask my boss.

    But you and your boss work for the same company, how do I know he's not lying?

    Because he doesn't lie.

    How do I know that?

    Because we sayso.

    Can I get an independent opinion?

    Sure.

    From who?

    The dealer.

    The dealer! He works for the same company!

    That's it, all we have to tell you, take it or leave it.

    grumble, go to the next dealer down the street.

    Hi! I'd like to buy a truck! I need a v-8!

    Sure! We have one right here.

    Go to look, hood welded shut....

    #$%^&*!!!!

    Computerised voting is such a bad idea on so many levels I am amazed it's even gotten one positive comment. It's the mother of all voting scams, sophisticated fraud and manipulation potential to the nth degree, way past simple ballot box stuffing in the olden days. Way, way, way past. Now combine that with the "two party that is one party in reality" district and debate and "news" rigging, well, there ya go, millions of people who *think* they just voted.

  65. Frodo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Frodo rules Brazil?

  66. Electronic Voting Systems should be Open Source by Corpus_Callosum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The source code for any software that counts or processes votes should be open source so that everyone who is so inclined can take a look for themselves and evaluate the code.

    Releases of this code should be signed by a non-profit in a manner similar to a key-ceremony used at CAs, and the hardware that runs the software should be auditable and designed to only run software that is signed by the aforementioned signer.

    Anything less than this leaves a glaring black-whole where any sort of nastiness may occur.

    As much as I hate to say it, a "palladium" style trusted system approach is probably needed to make electronic voting trustable. I'm not in favor of having my hardware in lockdown, but I sure as hell would want it on the equipment that chooses who is going to run my country!

    --
    The reason that it can be true that 1+1 > 2 is that very peculiar nonzero value of the + operator
  67. Talk or action? by code_rage · · Score: 1

    I'm not going to try to figure out whether the /. consensus is "paper trail is needed" or not, but it does seem like this issue needs some action, not just snappy debate that is then forgotten when the next /. article about the SuperWhizBang graphics card is posted.

    So the question is, what are we going to do about it? Who is the relevant advocacy organization? The EFF? Are we just going to talk about it or is this important enough to take some action, and if so then what action?

  68. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or, the blind followers of a petulant, delusional megalomaniac could try using his internet creation skills to hack the voting booths...that way he wouldn't have to change the rules after the game's been played

  69. Maybe. by rkent · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OK, the parent post sounds kind of hysteric, but it could be (sort of) true.

    It's difficult to overstate the importance of having a fully auditable voting process. That's the main advantage of paper ballots, be they punch cards, "check the box," whatever: you can recount them. Someone else can recount them. We can disagree on the interpretations of those recounts, but we can at least observe the "primary source" and make a call one way or another.

    Now, electronic voting would certainly have advantages. If people could walk through a "voting app" where they could see all of the choices for each office, and do a confirmation step before "submitting" their vote, that would be awesome, and way more accurate than what we do now. However, think of the system which will be used to achieve this: if it's good, the designing company will want to sell it everywhere. So the application will become one hell of a valuable peice of "intellectual property." Do you think we'll be allowed to see the code for it? No way! So no error checking that way; we just have to trust that every vote counted was processed correctly. That's a lot of trust. I don't suspect that any voting-machine-manufacurer would insert deliberate bias, but the lack of ability to examine the process for correctness is just unacceptable. It's too important to just trust some private company, whose interest isn't necessarily coincident with accuracy.

    An open-source voting app would be somewhat better; any independent person could audit the code for correctness, but to verify its performance on an actual dataset would require re-establishing the same exact platform later, and of course maintaining a digital copy of the inputs.

    In either of these scenarios, it seems outright necessary that there be a physical record of votes cast using the system that independent, non-computer-expert people could examine. Ideally, the machine would print a small "receipt" for each vote cast which could be collected and, if necessary, recounted and compared against the digital tally.

    1. Re:Maybe. by Rick.C · · Score: 1
      So the application will become one hell of a valuable peice of "intellectual property." Do you think we'll be allowed to see the code for it? No way!

      Well, not legally at least. But there are those who could probably sneak a PEEK. And probably a POKE, too.

      Come on, is there anything that is unhackable?

      Does anybody trust our buddy Ashcroft to keep his fingers out of it? History has shown us that those who are untrusted to protect the nation at all costs tend to have some funny notions about how to interpret "protect the nation" and "at all costs".

      --
      You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
      "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  70. Moore being pro-war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Yes, Saddam Hussein was killing at least 10,000 a year through execution and starvation. If this is not a war, what is?

    If Moore's support of Saddam and his deadly war by opposing effective efforts to quickly stop him is not pro-war, what is?

    In the week just before the 40 allies decided to stop him, in fact, he had 90 civilians in Kurdistan executed.

    His war is stopped. Moore opposed any effort to stop Saddam's war against Iraq (which has actually been part of a longer-term war against other nations as well, including Israel, Iran, and Kuwait).

    You need to look behind the "anti-war" label. For example, with approval of the "anti-war" people in Vietnam, the North Vietnam invaders were able to conquer South Vietnam and invade Cambodia and kill at least 2,000,000 people.... after the U.S. was out of the picture.

    1. Re:Moore being pro-war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh, maybe I misread your post. I wasn't seeing what point you were trying to make. Now I do and I agree.

    2. Re:Moore being pro-war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a fucktard. I can't even believe that someone as you can have the mental capacity to feed himself, much less to use the keyboard.

      You might recall that the 10000 ppl/year figure was said to have something to do with sanctions, ones that a certain country was opposed to removing? And your pro-war friends have done a lot better things in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Napalm, executions, and rule-by-force over a region that didn't really need or want the americans there. IF the war was stopped, it wasn't because of the hippies and peacenicks, it's cuz your pro-war people realized that the only way they're gonna win is if they nuke the whole north vietnam, laos and cambodia twice over.

      I support online voting, if it would somehow block asswipes who are tit-fed on CNN. Such as yourself. Have a good day, asswad.

    3. Re:Moore being pro-war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is the Republican Party sending people to post on Slashdot?

  71. Why reliable electronic voting will not happen by targo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The main reason is actually political, not technical. Imagine a world where we have really foolproof and very convenient electronic voting (like everybody just voting from home over the Internet, provided that a good and secure protocol is invented for it). Elections would be hundreds of times cheaper because of lesser staff and organization costs. As a result it would become possible to have people vote for many more issues than just who is going to be a president (think Switzerland where almost everything is decided by popular vote). We would never have DMCA or any of the other strange laws pushed through by special interest groups and hurting the general public. Congress would suddenly lose 90% of its importance, becoming just a law-drafting institution without too much decision power.
    Obviously this is something that today's rich and powerful would never want to happen, and they would fight long and hard before giving any of this power up.

    1. Re:Why reliable electronic voting will not happen by isorox · · Score: 1

      And just how would we have a referendum wihtout all the information available? What if information that a law is based on is classified?

    2. Re:Why reliable electronic voting will not happen by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Elections would be hundreds of times cheaper because of lesser staff and organization costs.

      And less democratic and trustworthy. Personally, I like the fact that the polls are run by ordinary citizens, not by the state's IT department. There's a whole level of abuse that this system makes difficult. The more centralized the voting process becomes the easier it is to corrupt.

      As a result it would become possible to have people vote for many more issues than just who is going to be a president

      I'm for this. Who wouldn't like to be able to pass unlimited spending and cut taxes to 0? Representative government prevents a lot of this. Look at California and Arizona where ballot initiatives have totally hosed their state budgets.

      As a result it would become possible to have people vote for many more issues than just who is going to be a president

      Actually, the rich would like this because it would be easier to influence, corrupt and control it.

      --
      -- $G
    3. Re:Why reliable electronic voting will not happen by Cyno · · Score: 1

      Not if they lost their grip on the media system, too..

      Before you can have a democracy you must first have a country of free thinking people.

      We have a country of brainwashed people who vote the way CNN, Fox, MSNBC, AOLTW, etc. would have them vote. Get rid of AOLTW, Fox, MSNBC and you MIGHT have a chance at having a fair democracy.

  72. It's the NY Times. Do you believe them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...they then quote election officials and vendors who dismiss that opinion as the ignorant work of dreamers. The reporter titles his article, 'To Register Doubts, Press Here' and seems less than convinced..

    Yes, but this is the New York Times we're talking about here. If they were running the US elections, they'd just sit at home for six months, and then write a long, flowery report, cribbed from press wire sources, about how they'd spent that time travelling up and down the country, tallying votes, and speaking to all those voters. Honest. Haven't got the travel receipts immediately to hand, but we did it. Really.

  73. Depends on how _you_ interpret the quotes by code_rage · · Score: 1

    Well, *you* were not fooled by the self-serving obfuscation of the industry flack, were you? If anything, the quote made the flack look even more ridiculous by totally dismissing a valid concern.

  74. Try it this way by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

    I vote with bits and receive a unique, random number tied to my vote and encypted with a passphrase of my choosing. With this and an application or kiosk I can later "check" the vote in my hand. Later I can go online and review my vote to see if it was recorded acuratly. I can also count for myself everyone elses vote if I care to. If enough of us say hey I voted for X not Y the election is nullified. The only problem I see is sore loosers lying about their vote to throw the election. In this case if you want to register a problem you would need to reveal your vote via your pass phrase.

    --
    Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
  75. Wisconsin Election Board decertified Touchscreens by bmasel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In January, 2002 the State Elections Board approved two touch screen voting systems, the ES&S Votronic
    DRE and the GBS Accu-Touch EBS 100 DRE.


    This spring I raised the system integrity issues with the Board, and persuaded them to revoke the certifications.


    It helped that after garnering over 10% in the last race for Governor, the Wisconsin Libertarian Party was able to place a representative on the Board, the only 3d Party State Elections Official in the US.

    --
    Ben Masel: 51,282 votes for US Senate in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary
  76. queuing? by freedommatters · · Score: 1

    Are people actually queuing to vote in the picture that goes with that article? Does that happen in the states?

    Over here in the UK I've never seen a queue at a polling station in my life!

    John
    Send fake stories to your friends with the Not True Times, just like Jayson Blair!
  77. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by FroMan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Hmmm, do I never get mod points because I don't sheep like everyone else here?

    -1 flamebait.

    --
    Norris/Palin 2012
    Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
  78. Sideshow who? by liquidsin · · Score: 3, Funny

    "I think the concerns being raised are 100 percent valid," Mr. Terwilliger said. "However, they're being raised by people who have little idea about what actually goes on."

    Somehow I just don't trust a man named 'Terwilliger' to *not* rig an election. He'd probably have our dead pets voting him in as mayor...

    --
    do not read this line twice.
  79. Isn't Sideshow Bob's Last name by xenocide2 · · Score: 0

    Terwilliger? That alone should be enough to not trust these people. The last thing the world needs is yet another Frasier guest appearance!

    --
    I Browse at +4 Flamebait

    Open Source Sysadmin

  80. 99% by linuxwrangler · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "...a feedback card in the August 2002 statewide primaries found that 99 percent of voters were pleased with their Diebold machines."


    Isn't that the same percentage of people who "voted" for Saddam Hussein in the last Iraq "election". I wonder if the "feedback" was tallied on a Diebold machine.

    I work in market research and I have never, ever seen 99% of people polled agree on anything. This 99% of the vote statement should give anyone considering e-lections the willies.

    --

    ~~~~~~~
    "You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
    1. Re:99% by isorox · · Score: 1

      "We surveyed 100 employees on whether they want to keep their job"

  81. Simple Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I came up with this solution in a discussion with some friends after the 2000 election fiasco:

    Voting can be simple - touch screen, menu driven, programmable interface, whatever makes it simple. When you've done all your voting - your vote prints out as a sheet of paper (maybe a computer-card sized stiff cardboard.)
    Printed on a laser printer - in text for reading, and bar-code for processing; say, 1 card for each election - federal (president senate and congress), state, county, etc. The card can be checksummed and the validation included in the bar code so that it is difficult to counterfeit ballots to stuff the box.

    This gives you a way to hand-count the ballots or run through an electronic counter. If you ar less concerned over secret ballots, you could use the validation code to determine and delete a person's vote when that vote is challenged.

    Each voter could read exactly what the ballot said (the name and position voted for) and reprint the ballot if they make an error. The computer could record "cancelled" ballots - even say "please insert the ballot into the cancel slot to print a new one", and not allow a new one once another person entered the booth to start voting. (I.e. you can't take the wad of ballots at the end of the day and revote the ones you don't like. And the serial code/ time stamp etc. would make that easy to track.)

    There is always a paper trail of physical ballots that could be hard to alter, and a validation code, similar to a digital signature, that would make the level of effort needed to forge ballots much more complex than normal.

    I do not trust a purely electronic voting system; too easy to rig.

    Here in Canada they still use the hand-marked ballots and they're counted by hand and the results are tallied within a few hours - but we rarely have elections more complicated that 1 member of parliament or a mayor, aldermaen, and a school board. Ballots are short and simple.

  82. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by BrokenHalo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I am not only gratified, but absolutely gobsmacked that your post has been modded +3 on Slashdot, a bastion of the most rabid extreme-redneck-brigade. Maybe times are changing after all...

  83. No I wasn't... by Goonie · · Score: 1
    But then, I am a grad student studying software testing (so I have a better-than-average idea of the difficulty of verifying a computer system has an acceptably low error rate), have read reasonably widely about computer security, and have read some of Rebecca Mercuri's stuff in the past, so I'm hardly a typical reader of the article.

    The key issue I raised in my comment remains. Why leave the key point up in the air? Why blather on about an irrelevancy (what the manufacturers say the public thinks about the new systems)? If questions don't get on-topic answers, ask more specific ones.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
  84. Why question him? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Hopefully he irritated people enough to start questioning the Bush regime."

    So far, no one has provided any valid reason to question his well thought out goals and objectives. Except perhaps to question why the tax cut is not bigger.

    1. Re:Why question him? by missing000 · · Score: 0

      Well, I would refer you to the well thought out book on the subject, Stupid White Men by Michael Moore

    2. Re:Why question him? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would agree. This book is 100% well thought out. However, the content sucks. Almost all of it is shit. It's well placed shit. All in a nice book and of course, well thought out.

  85. eletronic voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    gpl it also, that will make it more legitimite. peer review is good!

  86. Stalin Said it best by doublem · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide everything."

    -- Stalin (Former leader of the USSR)

    So the voting machine manufacturers are now the ones who really run the country.

    Great.

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  87. Yeah, great idea by siskbc · · Score: 1
    You will discover, that in some less meticulous countries, e-voting has already been a reality.

    Guess that explains how a tool like Chirac got elected. Seriously, who the hell brags that their country's voting system isn't as meticulous as the US's?

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Yeah, great idea by marc_gerges · · Score: 2, Informative
      1. .ch is Switzerland, Chirac is the pesident of France. Geneva as mentioned in the link, is indeed a swiss city.
      2. Chirac has been voted with an 80+ majority at the last elections because his opponent was a right wing nationalist. Voting for him was the lesser evil.
      3. Chirac made quite some mistakes during his career, but ignoring Bush's call to arms was not one of them. The majority of Chirac's constituents are behind him on that one.
  88. Voter Verified! by xenocide2 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "voter-verifiable audit trail," meaning a permanent record of each vote that can be checked for accuracy even after the election.

    After discussing with Dr. Dill for a presentation, the meaning of voter verifiable is very specific. It means that the voter can look at their ballot, and verify that their vote reflects their intention before they hand it in. Nobody I know can inspect the electrical charges to determine whether their vote was recorded correctly or not (or even at all!).

    I happen to live in Johnson County, Kansas, one of the sites mentioned. There's two things to keep in mind there. 1. Its an off year so turnout is usually very low. 2. The feedback card is optional, so unless you have something specific to say, you're not likely to fill it out. 3. Its difficult to evaluate the system as a whole until the vote is canvassed. Even fraud can be user friendly.

    The independent testers aren't exactly trustworthy either. There's only 3 nationwide. VoteHere machines were verified from these ITAs (VoteHere is currently facing a wrongful termination suit for firing a QA Engineer who put too many bugs on the 'Critical' list.)

    --
    I Browse at +4 Flamebait

    Open Source Sysadmin

  89. If you slashdotting open source geeks are so smart by stomv · · Score: 1

    Why hasn't the open source community created an open source voting platform?

    Really. Why haven't we done this? Consider:
    * Free operating system (beer and speech)
    * Free voting application (beer and speech)

    Why wouldn't the government use this for voting? If it was peer reviewed by academia (including members of the academies) and business, then American geeks could at least be sure that the "black box" of the voting system, in fact, wasn't.

    Sure -- there are still other problems with electronic voting. However, it would reduce the number of conspiracy theories, and would be one more killer app from open source.

  90. Computer Scientists: a World of Theoretics by handy_vandal · · Score: 1
    From the article:
    Penelope Bonsall, director of the Federal Election Commission's Office of Election Administration, which helps set guidelines for the voting process, said that the possibility of vote tampering has always existed and that the possibilities were no greater with computers.

    "When you're dealing with computer scientists, they deal in a world of theoretics, and under that scenario anything is possible," Ms. Bonsall said. "If you probe a little further, the chance of these failures, the risk of that happening wide-scale in a national election is almost nil."
    To which I say: BWAH-HAH-HAH-HAH-HAH, HAH-HAH-HAH ... !!!

    (PS: Snicker, snort.)
    --
    -kgj
  91. Stupid white men? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've read the book. Not only is it racist, it is not well thought out as a book of fact. As a book of fiction, it is OK if quite useless. No facts though. Moore loves to show his ignorance everywhere he goes.

  92. Not everything needs update by elpapacito · · Score: 1

    The old adage "if it isn't broken, don't fix it" isn't always true, but it seems to work perfectly in this situation.

    How relevant is speed in counting ? One day or one week is irrilevant, given that the old governemt/old president remains in charge until the count is done. There is no power/control void.

    How relevant is counting cost ? Nearly zero. One can also reduce cost to zero by drafting people for voting-duty and pay them a symbolic token of presence. If one doesn't like that, maybe he/she could try some other system than democracy, you'll be surprised how good is once you don't have it anymore.

    How relevant is potential for fraud ? Enormous, obviously. A machine can be hacked/modified in a thousand different ways to produce the desidered results.

    It doesn't require a brain surgeon to draw a cross on a voting symbol on a piece of paper with a permanent marker. It requires a couple of corrupted individuals to change the result of millions of votes collected by computers, remember the credit card database theft that endangered millions of credit card owners ? Same thing.

    1. Re:Not everything needs update by mpe · · Score: 1

      How relevant is speed in counting ? One day or one week is irrilevant, given that the old governemt/old president remains in charge until the count is done.

      Quite often in the US the new President/Congressman/Mayor dosn't take office until several months after they election. In other places elections can take effect straight away.

      How relevant is potential for fraud ? Enormous, obviously. A machine can be hacked/modified in a thousand different ways to produce the desidered results.

      Not only that, the fraud can be difficult for a non expert to identify. Even someone who is illiterate can identify when a counter places a paper ballot in the wrong pile.

  93. Free Project by Vollernurd · · Score: 1

    MY good friend Jason Kitcat worked on a e-election project for his thesis and did a hell of a lot of research on this. I was stunned after talking to him recently that he too has become diillusioned with e-voting as it stands now. His main concerns were the ease with which ballots could be tampered with, especially where there is the political will... See here for more info: free-proect.org.

    --
    Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules.
  94. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sheep isn't a verb.

    And when 50,000 largely black, largely Democrat voters are denied their legal right to vote because they were falsely accused of being felons by a computerized list that was inaccurate to begin with and encouraged to be more so by the Florida government, then saying an election was stolen isn't flamebait.

    Well, it is, but who said the truth can't be flamebait?

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  95. Here on the moon.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here on the moon we vote by putting colored sticks up our asses and then parading around the downtown section of crater Tycho.

    Color indicates candidate. It's that simple and fraud, e.g., double voting, is sufficiently painful that no one does it.

  96. Easy big fella by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    Maybe I'm misreading your tone but I got the impression that you don't like the measured criticism of the US political system that the parent post presented. It may well be the case that this country has done great things for you that would not have been possible where you came from, and for that the country deserves praise. But the criticism presented by the parent post was hardly scathing or blind; in fact it was dead-on accurate in its assertion that US politics are becoming corrupt and that there is a need for citizen vigilance and participation.

    The "horrible system" mantra in your post is your contribution to this discussion, not the parent post's, yet you repeat it accusatorily as though to ascribe it to the parent. This tactic bears similarities to propaganda, not reasonable discussion.

    The values of this country which you claim to hold so dear might just disappear if reasonable critiques of the politicial situation are met with disbelief and calls for abject adulation.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  97. More information about corporate/stolen elections. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Hill Newspaper has confirmed that Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) has an ownership stake one of the largest manufacturers of voting machines in the country. (Hagel's ethics filings pose disclosure issue)

    Several others have alleged the role of this company, Election Systems & Software, in several surprising Republican upsets recently, including the defeat of Max Cleland, formerly a popular Democratic Senator from Georgia.

    See:
    If You Want To Win An Election, Just Control The Voting Machines
    Peter Coyote on voter fraud

  98. American Idol by cHix0r · · Score: 1

    Wait. So you mean that because America votes for American Idol electronically, the contest must be rigged? No way! ha ha.

  99. another truth-impaired liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The blacks denied voting were Haitians and Cubans, and they were largely Republican votes. Along with all the military votes thrown out by LePore and the rest of the crooked Democrats, it's just more AlGore dishonesty.

    This never would have been an issue if AlGore hadn't pissed on the Greens over the Florida Everglades, or even if he had won his home states of Tennessee or Arkansas.

    So give it up already, stupid.

    1. Re:another truth-impaired liberal by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      The blacks denied voting were Haitians and Cubans, and they were largely Republican votes.

      Sure. When the Governor asked the private company paid millions to handle the database to be -less- accurate in determining whether someone was on the list, it was to disenfranchise largely Republican Haitan and Cuban votes.

      That's an interesting conspiracy theory. You're suggesting they -didn't- want Bush to win? Why would Jeb do that? You're suggesting that Pres. Bush's campaign manager, who coincidentaly was in charge of the Florida election, was actually working against her boss? That's just strange.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:another truth-impaired liberal by StealthBadger · · Score: 1
      The blacks denied voting were Haitians and Cubans, and they were largely Republican votes.

      1. If they weren't U.S. citizens, how could they have been eligible in the first place?

      2. Half of the people who were removed from the rolls were caucasian, take whatever you like from that.

      3. Many of the people had no criminal records.

      4. Take a look. Apparently it was more important to get the felons off the rolls than to allow the innocent to exercise their franchise. Seems kinda backwards in the land of "guilty until proven innocent."

      Along with all the military votes thrown out by LePore and the rest of the crooked Democrats, it's just more AlGore dishonesty.

      No more crooked than letting party workers to prepare absentee ballots before they go out, and error check them when they come back in. Everyone in that election was dirty, and insisting the rules be followed to the letter is better than tweaking ballots once they've come back in.

      This never would have been an issue if AlGore hadn't pissed on the Greens over the Florida Everglades, or even if he had won his home states of Tennessee or Arkansas.

      Not sure what you mean regarding the first case. The main issue for the Greens was the attempt to get 5% of the national vote in order to qualify for federal election money.

      And overall, no matter who you believe should have won, you miss the point of the article. The election system is already creaky, and adding more bells and whistles to it is only going to make it even harder work towards making it honest.

      <ad hominem attack gleefully snipped>

      --
      Searching for Truth, Justice, and the Guy Who Boosted My Wallet a Few Weeks Back....
  100. What the Supreme Court said was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Still, the public word of the Supreme Court was:
    1) You can't count the votes until we say so.
    2) There isn't time to count the votes, so seal the evidence"


    Here was the real message of the Supreme Court: "The ballots have already been counted a few times again. What is the point of doing it again especially if it is illegal under Florida law to postpone election results this way?"

    The evidence was not sealed at all. In fact, when the votes were counted after the fact, Gore lost even this unnecessary count he asked the Supreme Court for.

    1. Re:What the Supreme Court said was by aborchers · · Score: 1

      It was also illegal under Florida law to fail to honor the "intent of the voter", which is conveniently overlooked by most people taking your position. The Florida supreme court was charged with resolving this point of State Consitutional law and came down one way, the US Supreme Court came down another.

      In my irrelevant opinion, Gore screwed up royally by asking for selective recounts which violated (or even appeared to violate) equal protection.

      I'm not favoring either of the potential outcomes, just pointing out that FL law, like the election, came down to a choice between undesirables...

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    2. Re:What the Supreme Court said was by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      In fact, when the votes were counted after the fact, Gore lost even this unnecessary count he asked the Supreme Court for.

      No, that's what CNN and other media sources concluded by deciding how the recount would have occured. Under Gore's proposed recount scheme, he lost. Under the full recount scheme ordered by the Florida Supreme Court -- you know, counting all the votes, like we're a Democracy or something -- he won. That's what the data shows. Gore won. But CNN said the opposite. Huh.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    3. Re:What the Supreme Court said was by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Aha,

      This is the BIGGEST problem. It's NOT the Supreme Court's job to interpret Florida state law.

      They can evaluate it as constitutional or unconstitutional. But like any appeals court, they don't deal with issues of "fact" only consistency of legal precedent.

      By precedent the Supremes should NEVER have accepted the case, especially after a Federal District court dissmissed it as groundless.

      There were no grounds for the "irreparable harm" argument for a stay of counting ballots. That would imply that continuing voting would take something from Bush that was his by legal right. The outcome of a recount was indeterminate and could just as likely certified Bush the winner.

      There was no grounds for the "Equal Protection" argument was absoluetly farsicle. Bush had just as much right to ask for a recount Gore. The votes themselves are anonymous so their can be NO discrimination that one undervoted ballot can be treated differently than another based upon WHO CAST IT (ballots don't have rights, voters do).

      The most weasly thing is that the Supreme Court never actually issued a verdict that could be used as case law. They basically published their findings informally and allowed the stay against counting to stand. They didn't have the guts to stand behind their verdict in an official way. That tells us all that they too knew that it was BS and baseless in law and precedent.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  101. too complicated. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Why bother pre-printing the cards? Also, the vote needs to be left at the polling place for autidts to be useful. The machine can print the vote after you have cast it, without any identifying information, and on verification you drop it in a box and go home. That would be a much simpler, voter verifiable, paper record.

    I live in Louisiana where electronic voting machines are used. You push your votes and push a button and it chimes and that's it. It's really creepy. There's a joke going around about LA lending some of these machines to Florida, but Florida having to return them because they kept electing Edwin Edwards.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:too complicated. by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      I thought that preprinting the cards would make it more difficult to tie the cards to a particular voter. If the cards were printed after the voter signed in, the cards could be tied to a particular voter. I wanted it so that only the voter would know how they voted.

      The problem I missed is the coercion problem. I will reply to one of those threads with a possible solution.

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
  102. Result would be less accurate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But the initial result would be a more accurate estimate."

    No, it would be less accurate, as the results would be polluted with made-up individuals instead of real counted persons.

    "Perhaps we need a dual census. The raw counts, which are used for politically biasing things, like redistricting, and adjusted counts, which are intended to be the best estimate of who actually lives there"

    I agree totally. This count should include only the following: age, citizenship status (eligibility to vote), and place of residence. This is all that is needed for the redistricting.

    This one should be mandatory. The one that counts toilets and asks for race should be entirely optional.

    "Unfortunately, the argument for the statistical estimate was that it would enable cost cutting"

    Do you know how much costs could be cut by having the census form contain only the 3 necessary questions? You'd reduce the undercount problem as well: there would be less resistance, and this census would be a lot easier and quicker to take.

  103. I used an electronic voting machine last year by Mouth+of+Sauron · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And as a system administrator, it was an unhappy joke. I love the good things that technology can do, but I am wary of making things overcomplicated and awkward simply for the want of technology.

    The first thing is that paper ballot voting is relatively simple, unless you're from Dade county Florida. I stood in one line to sign the roll and get my ballot, and I stood in another to wait for a polling booth.

    With the new-fangled voting machines, the number of lines I had to stand in was doubled. I stood in one line to sign the roll, and get a chit. Stood in another line to hand the chit to a poll worker behind one of the machines. The pollworker then took my chit and enters the number from it into one of the polling computers, and then handed me a receipt. Then I stood in the last line to wait for a polling machine to vote.

    One I reached the polling computer, I was suprised to find neither a touch screen, nor a display with buttons on it like an ATM. There was no joystick or mouse. Instead, this machine had a device called a "scrolling wheel." To vote I had to operate this device which revolved like a analog telephone dial. The liquid crystal screen was covered with the finger smudges of frustrated voters trying to do the natural thing which was to press a button. However, with this device I had to spin the wheel around to select my choice, and then press a rather large red button to choose it. This was quite counter intuitive despite the fact I was raised around analog telephones. The sensitivity of the wheel was set quite high, and it was easy to miss my choice on the screen. In order to go back to my choice I had to spin the wheel the other way, often passing my choice from the other direction.

    Another thing I didn't like about this system was that a computer only could manage a few machines so instead of walking over to any empty polling booth I had to wait to vote only a booth attached to the box my number had been entered. After mucking about with this I decided to talk to a couple of the poll workers about this new system.

    The first thing I noticed is that the poll worker machines were connected to their polling booths with a simple serial cable. Some of these cables were taped to the floor and others were suspended from the ceiling with twist ties. I examined one of the cables and the poll worker scolded me because apparently the machines were attached in a daisy chain configuration and if one of the machines was unplugged then all of them would stop working. Then a technician would have to be paged to come to the polling place to reset the equipment and the votes would be thrown out as unreliable!

    Viva Paper Ballots!

  104. Let's use colored marbles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In lieu of that, if we are forced to endure this electronic voting crap, I think the running tallies of all candidates should be shown to us as we vote. That way, if Joe Blow is in the lead in your precinct with 1,000 votes when you vote, and at the end of the day he only has 362 in your precinct, I'd say something was fishy. We can all watch the watchers.

  105. American Idol = Linus by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    "Wait. So you mean that because America votes for American Idol electronically, the contest must be rigged?"

    If American Idol were subject to rigging by hackers as some fear happens with electronic voting, Linus Torvalds would win every time.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  106. it was Gore who stopped the recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Florida law provided for a statewide recount, and Gore could have had it had he asked for it. Instead, he asked for a selective recount in only those districts favorable to his effort. That went nowhere because it had no basis in FL law, but chewed up valuable time.

    By the time it dawned on him to ask for the statewide count, there wasn't enough time before the Electoral College to conduct it.

    Thank you David Boies, superlawyer fuckup par excellance.

  107. Hey let's ask a focus group about focus groups too by harangutan · · Score: 1

    70 percent of voters in the state's November 2002 elections, which were conducted on Diebold machines, reported being very confident that their vote was accurately counted.

    Leaving aside for a moment the blindingly obvious fact that public opinion about whether a thing is true has no bearing on whether or not the thing actually is true, I have to ask...

    Was this poll conducted on the same machines?

  108. I read it a little differnt than you did. by twitter · · Score: 2, Insightful
    At this point, the question arises - why are these critics wrong? What are they not understanding about the system? Rather than following up on this point, though, the reporter takes a completely different, and totally irrelevant tack, discussing public confidence in the machines.

    I dissagree, the article was beautifully constructed to alarm the reader:

    • Expert Opinion crying for a paper trail with a link to more information
    • insulting and vauge official dissmisal of concerns
    • insulting and vauge vendor dissmisal of concerns
    • public ignorance and willingness to be screwed
    • more expert opinion, just in case you forgot

    It gave you the gist of the problem, no paper trail for audit, and told you that you should be alarmed because your elected officials, backed by vendors "experts", vaugly dissmiss the problem without proof and that the public is ready to buy into it. References were given that you should follow as a responsible voter. If there was any flaw it was in not persuing the reasons for dissmisal. Calling your opponents ignorant dreamers is not very convincing.

    Another poster has done a nice job of explaining one large problem with a paperless voting system.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  109. No, Gore even lost that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Under the full recount scheme ordered by the Florida Supreme Court -- you know, counting all the votes, like we're a Democracy or something -- he won. That's what the data shows. Gore won."

    No, Gore lost even that. He only wins statewide if you count ballots without Gore votes on them: the dimpled chads, double votes, etc (the "undercount" and other attempts to turn ballots without Gore votes into Gore votes). This does not take into account also the vote tampering: all the chads punched out of votes during earlier recounts that left white paper all over the floor (which can lead one to believe that the ballots were hopeless contaminated pretty early on in the recount-over-and-over process)

    If you count ballots with actual real Gore votes, he loses.

    1. Re:No, Gore even lost that by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      No, Gore lost even that. He only wins statewide if you count ballots without Gore votes on them:

      You mean votes that weren't originally counted as having a Gore vote on them. The analysis of the ballots indicate that many of them were actually Gore votes. And the Florida court ruled that all legal votes, including undervotes, should be included in the recount. Under this "every vote counts" system, Gore won.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  110. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    therefore i suppose i'm a racist or jesusfreak or whatever the typical liberal response is this week

    I don't use insults of the week. You're just a prick, as you always have been.

  111. The Best Democracy Money Can Buy by Shafik · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you want to some solid examples of why not having a paper trail can lead to dramatic increases in vote fraud and higher rate of discarded ballots then you should read: The Best Democracy Money Can Buy Some may claim that the book is controversial but the author backs his claims with solid evidence and if you wish to do the footwork you can verify the facts for yourself.

  112. The roadblocks weren't physical by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 3, Informative
    The real road block came well before election day when approximately 57,700 "felons" were excluded from the voter rolls. The list was determined by a company called DBT Online.

    The list was determined in this manner:

    Most of the voters (such as "David Butler," a name that appears 77 times in Florida phone books) were selected because their name, gender, birthdate, and race matched--or nearly matched--one of the tens of millions of ex-felons in the United States. Neither DBT nor the state conducted any further research to verify the matches. DBT, which frequently is hired by the F.B.I. to conduct manhunts, originally proposed using address histories and financial records to confirm the names, but the state declined,the cross-checks. In Harris's elections-office files, next to DBT's sophisticated verification plan, there is a handwritten note: "DON'T NEED."
    This is taken from a story by Greg Palast did for Harper's Magazine and can be read here. Even more details can be had in this article.
    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  113. Oops!. by Rick.C · · Score: 1
    Oops! Freudian slip, I guess.

    "Untrusted" should have been "entrusted."

    --
    You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
    "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  114. The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by spaceyhackerlady · · Score: 1

    Whenever I read something like this I'm reminded of the "election" right after the revolution in Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.

    Everybody voted by computer, except that all the computers were all tied in to Mike Holmes/Adam Selene, who did the final count. It didn't occur to the auditors that if you feed honest figures in to a computer, the results could still be nonsense because the computer itself might be dishonest. It might even have a sense of humour...

    ...laura

  115. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so i'm a prick because i don't agree with you? how very average...very liberal philosophy you have there preach tolerance and then tell people how to live what to think etc etc...fucking hypocrites

  116. Who owns your vote? by coneal · · Score: 1

    (a) Each agency shall make available...

    What does agency mean here? My assumption is it refers only to parts of government - possibly specifically only the federal government - and is not applicable to private corporations.

    Who owns the private corporations that make these voting machines?

    A friend of mine sent me a link to a very scary article. (I have no more verified the information in this article than I have that of the NYTimes.)

    I find the idea that those running for public offices have or have had even partial ownership of the corporations producing these voting machines to be pretty frightening. There are many close elections in various states during every round of elections. All it would take to hijack a number of elections is code sending every 10th vote cast for your candidate to go to the candidate of the opposing party. With no paper trail, or public means of verification (and by public I don't mean the "independent" paid consultants this corporations hires to tell you it's safe) how do you know where your vote is going?

    Why aren't these voting machines open source?

  117. How true, those Damned liberals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ballots were counted, hand counted, every one of them, buy a coalition of newspapers, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, etc.

    What the liberals won't say is that the recount showed that if ALL of the ballots in Florida had been counted, according to existing Florida law used in the last election, Gore would have won by close to 10k votes.

    Under various "recount scenarios" which Bush and Gore sued over, Bush would have won 3 of them, Gore 1.

    Of course, the only count that should matter is a full hand recount that the Supreme Court blocked, and if that had been done, Gore would be president.

    Damned liberals!

  118. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Interesting
    > And when 50,000 largely black, largely Democrat voters are denied their legal right to vote because they were falsely accused of being felons by a computerized list that was inaccurate to begin with and encouraged to be more so by the Florida government, then saying an election was stolen isn't flamebait.

    As long as you're willing to say the same for 50,000 immigrant (legal or otherwise) non-citizen voters, also largely Democrat, who cannot vote, but sometimes do vote, then we're cool.

    (Clarification: Even if I take your 50,000 figure at face value, I don't think the inaccuracies in the list were deliberately engineered. Likewise, neither do I think the problem of aliens voting is deliberately engineered on any widespread scale. I consider both of these to be "error", not "corruption".)

    Both parties practice various forms of swinging elections. Some are legal ("gerrymandering"). Others (deliberately disenfranchising legal voters, or designing systems that can be circumvented to allow illegal voters to cast votes) are not.

    The goal of any electoral process is to prevent the latter, or at least to ensure that the "noise" introduced by corrupt officials is swamped by the "signal" of the legitimate votes.

    In the case of Floriduh, the signal was so close to 50/50 that it was lost in the noise of both manual counting error, mechanical vote-recording error, human voter error in not verifying that their vote was correctly punched and/or in not following instructions on the ballot, legal "error" in that efforts to recount changed the result through mechanical ballot mishandling and the fact that human beings had to rule on whether hanging chads ought to be counted as votes or not, and corruption. Given the large sources of error in any vote, even in Floriduh, error introduced by means of corruption was probably the smallest error factor of the bunch.

  119. Dr. Mercuri and the Common Criteria by Iorek · · Score: 1

    Dr. Rebecca Mercuri wrote her thesis on mapping Common Criteria (CC) requirements to electronic voting technology. She makes some good points: new security functional requirements must be developed before this technology could be evaluated using the CC; the CC allows for this through the use of extended requirements.

    However, I don't agree with her statements regarding the CC and what she calls counter-indications. She states that the CC should provide an explicit mechanism that prevents the inclusion of conflicting requirements, along the lines of forcing authors to include requirement dependencies or rationale for their absence. This is a bit ridiculous in my mind, since the mechanism is the evaluator. It's the security target evaluator's job to confirm that the security requirements are mutually supportive. If they conflict, the security target won't pass the evaluation (and therefore, neither will the product). There's absolutely no need for extra "if you include this, don't include that" spaghetti.

  120. Proof is in the Pudding by laupsavid · · Score: 1

    The proof of how deadly dangerous these fully electronic voting systems are in the pudding. Check this story from Scoop, about Diebold electronic chicanery in the Georgia elections.

    We need to Fight to prevent any voting system that does not generate physical evidence. And we need to Fight to ensure that any interested voter has the ability to assist with or audit the counting and recounts.

    That's if we want to live in a democracy. And the only reason we've lost what we have is so many people are too trusting and too lazy to act.

  121. US Commision on Civil RIghts begs to differ by Von+Rex · · Score: 2, Informative
    You must have information that the US Commission on Civil Rights didn't have. You see, they found widespread evidence of voter fraud and voter disenfranchisement, most of it directed at the black community.

    Here's the top of their site. Here's their table of contents for the 2000 election. Here's their report on voting irregularities.

    This might be the best report because it was written shortly after the election when the outrage was still fresh. Their later reports try to use language as neutral as possible. This report is still prominent on their site so I don't think they've renounced any of it. Here's a quote:

    In total, over 100 witnesses testified under oath before the Commission, including approximately 65 scheduled witnesses who were selected for the two hearings due to their knowledge of and/or experience with the issues under investigation. The Commission heard testimony from top elected and appointed state officials, including the Governor, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Director of the Florida Division of Elections and other Florida state and county officials. A representative of Database Technologies, Inc. [Choicepoint], a firm involved in the controversial, state-sponsored removal of felons from the voter registration rolls also testified.

    We also heard the sworn testimony of registered voters and experts on election reform issues, election laws and procedures and voting rights. Also, the Chair and Executive Director of the Select Task Force on Election Reforms established by Governor Jeb Bush testified before the Commission. Testimony was also received from the supervisors of elections for several counties, county commission officials, law enforcement personnel, and a states attorney. In addition to the scheduled witnesses, the Commission extended an opportunity for concerned persons, including Members of Congress and members of the Florida State Legislature, to submit testimony under oath that was germane to the issues under investigation. Significantly, the Commission subpoenaed scores of relevant documents to assist with this investigation.

    The evidence points to an array of problems, including those in the following categories:


    • Key officials anticipated before Election Day, that there would be an increase in levels of voter turnout based upon new voter registration figures, but did not ensure that the precincts in all communities received adequate resources to meet their needs;
    • At least one unauthorized law enforcement checkpoint was set up on Election Day resulting in complaints that were investigated by the Florida Highway Patrol and the Florida Attorney General;
    • Non-felons were removed from voter registration rolls based upon unreliable information collected in connection with sweeping, state sponsored felony purge policies;
    • Many African Americans did not cast ballots because they were assigned to polling sites that did not have adequate resources to confirm voting eligibility status;
    • College students and others submitted voter registration applications on a timely basis to persons and agencies responsible for transmitting the applications to the proper officials, but in many instances these applications were not processed in a timely or proper manner under the National Voter Registration Act ("motor-voter law");
    • Many Jewish and elderly voters received defective and complicated ballots that may have produced "overvotes" and "undervotes;"
    • Some polling places were closed early and some polling places were moved without notice;
    • Old and defective election equipment was found in poor precincts;
    • Many Haitian Americans and Puerto Rican v
    1. Re:US Commision on Civil RIghts begs to differ by workindev · · Score: 1
      You fail to point out several important facts:

      Choicepoint was commissioned in 1998 by the Florida director of elections, Ethel Baxtor, a Democrat.

      The NAACP settlement with the state of Florida was quick to point out that there were no allegations of fraud or discrimination. The state of Florida already changed the proceedure of removing felons from voter registration rolls, which is what the NAACP was suing for.

      Voting precincts are administered by local county election officials (not Jeb Bush or Catherine Harris). If African Americans could not vote because "polling sites that did not have adequate resources to confirm voting eligibility status", it is the fault of the local county election officials that they voted into office.

    2. Re:US Commision on Civil RIghts begs to differ by scarhill · · Score: 1

      Make sure you read the commission minority's dissent to the report:

      http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/vote2000/report/dissen t. htm

  122. Mechanical devices are a bit more transparent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    most of these voting systems are closed source software, and you have to "trust" that they are counting things right. The paper trail is just there so that if someone questions the operation of the automated system, they can empty the ballot box and commence with manual counting.

  123. bigger concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. That the system preserves anonymous voting... this is hard to do, and in many systems it is quite easy to find out who voted for who. This could be awfully chilling... don't you think?

    2. Once a vote is passed, the printer should printout a nice paper describing who the person voted for. Then, the person could look at the paper to make sure that the computer understood, and deposit the paper into a large drum so that, if the system is questioned, the physical paper can be counted.

  124. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    As long as you're willing to say the same for 50,000 immigrant (legal or otherwise) non-citizen voters, also largely Democrat, who cannot vote, but sometimes do vote, then we're cool.

    I haven't heard of this, how it happens, and on what scale. Feel free to provide links, since despite what some might think, I'll shit on anyone who tries to steal an election. You may note that the ones that actually steal an election, and a Presidential one at that, get the Three Alarm Chili version. :)

    (Clarification: Even if I take your 50,000 figure at face value, I don't think the inaccuracies in the list were deliberately engineered. Likewise, neither do I think the problem of aliens voting is deliberately engineered on any widespread scale. I consider both of these to be "error", not "corruption".)

    "Never blame on malice what can be blamed on stupidity" are wise words. But let's see... The government of Florida switches from a few-thousand-dollar contract to a million dollar contract with DBT Online to handle the list. Which included verifying the accuracy of the list. Which was clearly never done. Incompetence? Plausible. But when they are then told to -reduce- the accuracy of the name matching between their database and the Florida voter database (but still 100% on matching race!), I start to suspect a little more than incompetence.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  125. representative democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the decision to have a representative democracy rather than a popular democracy is based in more than just convenience. A large part of it is that it's tantamount to mob rule. A person is intelligent, but people are capricious. It would also make it a lot harder to have a coherent government policy, because all policy would be shaped by what public opinion is rightnownoquestions.

    Many people consider the motor voter registration act to be a failure, in that it made voting too easy! If voting was made as easy as an online poll, the quality of voting would go down as people would put less thought into it. I don't feel that's an elitist opinion. I don't know a lot of stuff, that's why I vote for a politician whose job it is to figure out what's best for the overall picture. He may not know any better than I do about any particular induxtry or legislation, but its his full-time job to figure out how it relates to the country.

  126. I think you are an optimist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've outlined many many things required for a 'perfect' implementation. Now enter Humans. How do you make sure that all of these are done properly... in thousands upon thousands of districts across the country. Many of which have a very low budget for this sort of thing.

    How do you verify this? With infinite sum of cash, ok, you can do it. But realistically... it's impossible. You can't. This is why a paper trail is better.

  127. Your proposal is Dangerous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This last one is important to me, because I feel it adds some accountability. If someone can get enough people to hand over their cards after an election an audit should be possible.

    What's interesting is how obviously educated people like yourself make mistakes in this domain. You should read the proposal instead of spouting an uneducated proposal. What you have here is just plain Dangerous. Anything that allows voters to be connected with their vote, after the vote is cast is seriously dangerous.

    "Err, John. You haven't turned in your voter record yet. As you know, in order to get promoted, you must have voted for Mr. Business. Please hand over your voter record today or you'll be fired."

    Basically, after voting is done, the computer progam should print out the vote. If the printout isn't right, then the person (while still in the booth) can revote till the printout says what he wants. Then the printout should be dumped into the ballot box on the way out. In this way, the ballot box can be counted if someone challenges the vote.

    1. Re:Your proposal is Dangerous. by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      You are right. I missed the coercion problem and that is at least as serious as the accountability problem. This is very hard to come up with a accountable system that is also immune to coercion.

      How about this idea: make it possible to have fake votes entered into the system. The system knows they are fake votes, but when looked up after the fact they look like real votes. One can hand a card to one's boss that is a fake vote, they can look it up in the system and it shows them what they want to see. Only the voter knows which card is their real vote and which card is a fake vote.

      This would also require either the ability to request a fake voter card at a polling place. This would most likely make the voter feel uncomfortable and what is stopping the polling place from handing out real voter cards when fake voter cards are requested. An alternative would be to allow the voter to print as many fake cards as they want after the vote, from home. One goes to a government Web site and you fill out a fake vote, it enters the vote into the system as a fake vote, and then allows the voter to print out the card. The cards would then have to be printable from standard printers. I don't see this as a real problem, because the serial numbers on the cards are the primary means to prevent people from bringing fake cards to the voting booths.

      But then this makes the accountability much more difficult. Any organization trying to do accounting would have no way of telling fake votes from real votes. The system could also be corrupted into using the fake votes as real votes.

      It would still be better than having no ability for any group that wanted to do some accounting of votes to be able to.

      The only way I see of accomplishing this would be to have a way for the government to grant access to some organizations to do accounting and give them access to the real database. This then places trust on the government that I would rather not place. A corrupt government could then give access to the real database to large corporations who could monitor their employees.

      The problem with not being able to bring the cards home, is it requires the government to cooperate with any accounting that is to be done. It requires that trust be placed on the government that the ballot boxes are not tampered with. In most districts most registered voters don't vote. What prevents the government from stuffing the ballot box? Even if the government did choose to allow an organization to count the ballot box after the vote, there is no way to know that it has not been tampered with. Right now the government only seems to grant access to the ballot boxes by court order. There is not much accountability on the ballot boxes themselves.

      I think if there is some way that voters could bring home their vote with out being coerced it would make voters feel more involved with the voting process. It would allow the voter to see that their vote was actually counted. It allows some accountability. The fake vote is one idea; do you have any better ideas?

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
    2. Re:Your proposal is Dangerous. by dszd0g · · Score: 1

      O.K., I found a flaw in this idea and a solution.

      The flaw:

      Corporation A: "All employees must show up on election day when polls open (say 7:00am) and stay until polls close (say 8:00pm). Group A will go to vote at 10:00am, Group B will vote at 11:00am, etc. While waiting in line, if any member of your group requests fake cards, it shall be reported to management. A certain number of each group has been ordered to request fake ballots, we expect them to be reported. When returning to work, please return your ballot and report and suspicious behavior to your supervisor."

      The solution:

      The fake cards are available inside the voting booths themselves. No one other than the voter, knows if they took any, or how many. The only problem is that the staff would need to make sure that the booths did not run out of fake cards.

      I realized, that the fake cards still does allow auditing. Voters know which card is real and which isn't. If an organization wants to audit and can get enough people to give them the correct cards, it should match the election results. If the organizations audit fails, it could be due to two situations. 1) enough people gave the organization their fake cards instead of real cards, or 2) the election was tampered with. A court order for the real database will determine which is involved.

      So any organization can still do a preliminary audit that will allow them to get the court order if the election fails the audit.

      There is also another issue that needs to be addressed with fake cards. When the front desk is handed a card, "I messed up my ballot." They need to scan it and verify that it is a real card and not a fake card, before handing a new real card to the person.

      This also creates the situation, where an employer could bribe to gain access to a poll booth during the election and gain access to the machine. The employer takes a certain percentage of their employees returned cards and scans them (which wipes the vote, but tells them if they were given real or fake cards). If the employer could threaten that a certain percentage of employees will be checked up on, it creates a problem.

      The only solution to this I can see, is to remove the ability to request a new card and thus, remove the ability to scan for real vs. fake cards. Once the voter prints out their vote to the card, it is finished. If enough voters say their printout did not match what they voted for, they would have to push for an investigation.

      There are many places where the vote could be corrupted at the polling place (such as handing voters fake cards instead of real cards in certain districts, or handing all non-caucasian voters fake cards) or inside the database. As far as I can tell, all of these would fail an organization audit.

      --
      This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
  128. An undervote is not a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An undervote is an attempt to turn a ballot without a vote into a vote.

    "And the Florida court ruled that all legal votes, including undervotes, should be included in the recount."

    Since an undervote is not a vote, it is not a legal vote. Illegal in fact. The Florida supreme court broke Florida law with its ruling.

    "Under this "every vote counts" system, Gore won."

    With "every vote counts", Gore lost. He only wins if you turn voteless ballots into Gore votes.

    "You mean votes that weren't originally counted as having a Gore vote on them. The analysis of the ballots indicate that many of them were actually Gore votes."

    No, I mean ballots that never did have Gore votes. These are only "turned into" Gore votes by altering what is really on the ballot.

    1. Re:An undervote is not a vote by aborchers · · Score: 1

      "An undervote is an attempt to turn a ballot without a vote into a vote."

      This is a stipulative definition that is inconsistent with Florida law.

      The Florida Supreme Court faced a choice between two conflicting points of State Consitutional law (certification deadlines vs recognizing intent of the voter) and decided it one way. The US Supreme Court decided it differently based on questions of equal protection. Given the relative composition of the two courts, it is easy to argue that both decisions were, sadly, partisan.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    2. Re:An undervote is not a vote by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      An undervote is an attempt to turn a ballot without a vote into a vote.

      When the voter circles the word "Al Gore" on the ballot, it's pretty damn obvious what they intended, even if the machine wasn't happy. So no, an undervote is an attempt to determine if the voter's intention was clear (in many cases it was) despite the machine failing to count it.

      No, I mean ballots that never did have Gore votes. These are only "turned into" Gore votes by altering what is really on the ballot

      Okay, for those few ballots, you're right. For the -rest- of the ballots, it's about recognizing what is actually on the ballot when it is obvious what the voter intended. If you count that, which, by the way, is what Florida law requires (determining the true intention of the voter), then Gore won.

      So you're wrong.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  129. Vote Quimby! by molo · · Score: 1

    Vote Quimby!

    *stuffs a $20 in your pocket*

    *whispers*
    Give me your verified ballot receipt and there's another for you.


    There is a long history in the US of buying votes outright. This would just make it accountable.

    -molo

    --
    Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.
    1. Re:Vote Quimby! by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      Give a $5 to someone who did vote for Quimby. Photocopy their vote. Collect $20.

      If you want to get more complicated, call police sometime before handing vote receipt to Quimby.

      For the cost of a few poll workers, you can already do this. Have someone stand in the voting booth with them as they vote.

  130. Btw...GOP got screwed in the previous election by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

    Btw, in the previous election, it had been the GOP who got screwed by the system. The problem was that it is easy to vote for the top person correctly, but the votes after that were frequently mispunched because the ballot used both sides with the punches in the middle:

    Bush O
    O Buchanan
    Gore O

    It's easier to read here (since the name is the same size as the bubble and I can't get the spacing to come out the way I want it: the Os should be lined up with each other and farther from the names), but in the actual ballots it was hard to tell that Gore was the third mark rather than the second. The previous election (which had similar problems, but since the vote wasn't close, so no one cared) had Clinton where Bush was and Dole where Gore was. I'm not sure who the third party candidate that benefited was.

    Regardless, the way to fix this is to count the votes as you go as NC apparently does (description posted above this). I think they are missing a step in that you should also check with the voter to see if the electronic vote is correct (i.e. if they don't hit submit, the vote is not added to the total, and they have a chance to redo their ballot). Apparently in NC, they only check to make sure that the vote is well formed (no overvotes), not that it is representative of how that person wishes to vote.

  131. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know...Parent is braindead. Slashdot is and has always been full of socialists and liberals.

  132. What about...? by LilGuy · · Score: 1

    How about a system using WORM chips. For each voter they pop a new WORM chip into the system, flash their name, voter info, and whatever choices they make onto the chip. Badabing badaboom, you've got a record. Plus they could make a nice little board im sure that they could pop hundreds of those things onto at a time and read them all and get the results quickly. Sounds good to me...

    --

    You're nothing; like me.
  133. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Yes, and he is right to be nervous. We should all be nervous. Case in point. 1996 and 2002 midterm elections. Chuck Hagel, who just so happens to own a company that produces the voting machine used in Nebraska wins a stunning upset by defeating an incumbant Govenor. Winning virtually every demographic even those that have never voted repblican... ever. Be afraid... be very afraid.

  134. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But when they are then told to -reduce- the accuracy of the name matching between their database and the Florida voter database (but still 100% on matching race!), I start to suspect a little more than incompetence.


    But that makes sense, it isn't malice. I am a DBA for a school district. I constantly match test results from the state to student records in our database. Name has a very high probability of being a mis-match. Sometimes they give their legal name. Sometimes their middle name, a shortened first name, a nick name... I see it all, but they are typically going to give you the same race everytime because race is a multiple choice question =D
  135. Voting, EFTPOS, and reliability.. by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1
    Something I plan to do is phone up my local EFTPOS company and ask them a few questions.
    • How many transactions per day do they process. Every day. 365 days a year.
    • How many of transactions get 'lost' or withdrawn from / paid into the wrong account.
    • What backups do they have if a transaction is disputed, or if any eftpos machines's internal records get erased.
    • Is there any technical reason why an electronic voting system couldn't be as reliable?

    --
    455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
  136. Democratic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Son, the United States of America is a representative REPUBLIC. "Based upon democratic principals(sp)" or some such horseshit. Back to Government 101 for you and Spelling 101 for me.

  137. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being nervous about voting as opposed to anything else done electronically is telling us that we don't have the confidence we need in the election system. In Florida we have had two or three botched elections and the machines in the last two have not provided any greater assurance of transparency. If anything we are seeing more obfuscation by county electoral officials, and less accountability.

    When fraud is already suspected (it walks like a duck...) then with these computers in place your concern now shifts to the technical personnel administering them, and the orders they get from management... have they been bought? Who is buttering their bread? How do their financial interests intertwine with a candidate being in office or not?

  138. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by clarkc3 · · Score: 1
    Remember, armed guards stood over them as they voted.

    They didn't even need the armed guards there, they system of voting they used actually had their equivelant of ssn on their ballots (each person is assigned their own ballow), plus they mark the box using fingerprints so it can be checked to make sure the person actually voted they way it was on the vote card

  139. Lets keep out the lazy folk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Honestly, I don't think we ought to make voting any easier at this point. It is good that those who want to vote take a little effort to get out or apply for a ballot by mail. If we make it as easy as email, we will get all the dumb-asses who send all those 100's of forwards (we all know who they are!) punching an ignorant vote with as much glee.

    Bev

  140. Re:Saddam didn't use electronic voting by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    That almost sounds like a good idea actually. It would prevent a lot of dead people from voting for one thing, but that would of course throw the whole secret ballot concept out the window.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  141. Expert Opinion? by blair1q · · Score: 1

    The NYT is engaging in argumentum ad verecundiam, "argument from authority".

    A paper trail won't stop fraud. In fact, it offers any number of ballot-destruction exploits. Open software and certified, well-tested systems will stop fraud.

    Forcing a paper trail will encourage laxity in the software and system design, and more importantly will add a crushing expense that could be used instead to further test and harden the system.

    1. Re:Expert Opinion? by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      A paper trail won't stop fraud. In fact, it offers any number of ballot-destruction exploits.

      Well, then, the destruction of the ballots would be evidence that the exploit took place. That's yet another argument in favor of hard copy evidence.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    2. Re:Expert Opinion? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      You've just allowed the exploit to succeed.

      The point of the paper ballots is to recreate the original result of the ballotting, not simply prove that ballots were destroyed. It's worthless if the proof of the result *can* be destroyed by force or accident.

  142. Voter Registration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about problems with voter registration.....especially in Illinois?

    Counting the votes once they're cast isn't the only consideration. Ensuring those who meet voting requirements (i.e. over 18, A US CITIZEN, not a felon) are allowed to vote and those that don't are not is a major one. There are some serious flaws in that system.

    During the most recent presidential election, I lived in Chicago. I am not an American citizen. (rest assured, I was there legally) When getting my drivers license I was asked if I wanted to register to vote. I pointed out to the woman that I was not a citizen and couldn't. She told me she could see that and asked if I wanted to anyway.

    Thats my story about one of the things wrong with the American voting system. But I will say its a hell of a lot better than getting shot if you don't vote for 'the right person'.

    I said no, by the way.

    1. Re:Voter Registration by mpe · · Score: 1

      I lived in Chicago. I am not an American citizen. (rest assured, I was there legally) When getting my drivers license I was asked if I wanted to register to vote. I pointed out to the woman that I was not a citizen and couldn't. She told me she could see that and asked if I wanted to anyway.

      Why should a document who's supposed purpose is to enable someone to drive on the public roads have anything to do with voting in the first place?

  143. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by uncoveror · · Score: 2, Informative

    Fixing elections with touchscreen voting isn't just a conspiracy theory. It happened in 2002 in Nebraska and Georgia. Read more.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  144. Partisan decisions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Given the relative composition of the two courts, it is easy to argue that both decisions were, sadly, partisan."

    Certainly. If the vote counts went the other way, the Democrats would be smug and the Republicans would be whining about a stolen election.

    1. Re:Partisan decisions by HiThere · · Score: 1

      And they'd also be right.

      Neither side had clean hands. If you jump to the conclusion that one side is wrong, that doesn't automatically make the other side right.

      But I have received more indications of Republican shenanigans than of Democratic...that makes sense, in Florida the Republicans were in power. It doesn't make them better or worse, it just gives them more opportunities.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  145. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    There is a good collection of links to the story about Hagel, and many other stories about the new electronic voting machines, at Seeing the Forest.

  146. Don't be afraid. by twitter · · Score: 1
    In any event, the answer is to simply design in safegaurds....not go back to older ways just because your scared of technology...please

    I have a new method of determining the "will of the people" at any given time. It works by averaging the thoughts of the entire US population and can miraculously filter out Mexican and Canadian thoughts. The result is perfect, real time democracy. I have determined that I shall be king in order to implement your will. No, I'm not going to tell you how it's done you silly ludite, just do what I say and trust me. This is so much better than that old way of sending electronic noise to vulnerable central computers.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  147. PLEASE ENABLE COMMENTS ON YOUR JOURNAL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [no text here]

  148. Fraud during e-voting? Some Evidence: by cutecub · · Score: 1

    Here's some evidence for ya:
    www.gregpalast.com

    -S

  149. Interpretation of opinion by Jackmon · · Score: 1
    Consider the following excerpts from the article.

    "I think the concerns being raised are 100 percent valid. However, they're being raised by people who have little idea about what actually goes on."

    Mr. Radke of Diebold (on voter confidence):added that voters have more, not less, confidence in electronic machines. He pointed to a study conducted in February at the University of Georgia that found that 70 percent of voters in the state's November 2002 elections, which were conducted on Diebold machines, reported being very confident that their vote was accurately counted. When this question was asked in September 2001, before electronic voting was in place in the state, only 56 percent of Georgia voters reported being very confident.

    The first essentially dismisses the opinions of computer scientist because they don't have enough info. The second uses the opinions of the general public to support validity of the machines.

    You can't have it both ways! Certainly the general public isn't more informed about this process than a Stanford computer science professor. Maybe they feel confident that they touched the write box on the screen, but that's not really the issue here is it?

  150. Re:wish for web voting... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
    Well, I do worry about election hacking...but, man, do I ever wish I could vote via the internet. It is difficult to get away from work, drive across town, stand in line...etc. I'm a contract worker in IT, and time is money...and deadlines can't be missed...

    If they could ever come up with a safe, verifiable, yet anonymous method of voting, I'd be willing to bet that voter numbers would increase immediately...I can tell you they would by ONE more for sure.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  151. That is the constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Even if you vote for your candidate and he garners the most votes, well, hang on to your boots because he doesn't win."

    That is the way it always has been: the national vote totals have never mattered. The state by state votes influence state Electors, and they have a national election.

    "How is that supposed to instill confidence in the election system?"

    Why didn't you complain about it before?

    1. Re:That is the constitution by smack_attack · · Score: 1

      I'm complaining about it now.

      And fuck you, I'm doing more than merely complaining, I'm active in local politics (both conventional and geurilla). So you can save your smarmy "if you're not part of the solution you're part of the problem" attitude and shove it sideways.

  152. Has anyone read the book *Votescam*? by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 1

    'cos if you have, e-voting fraud or even the results from the 2000 Presidential Election won't bother you so much... When IBM refuses to get involved in the vote tabulation business because of its perceived "shady" nature, that is sure to raise your eyebrows. And after reading this book, you'll never think the same way about the League of Women Voters again. They sure are making up for being excluded from representative democracy until this last century, big time.

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
  153. use lottery technology by The_Rook · · Score: 1

    i've looked over this entire forum and not one person suggested the use of lottery technology.

    you know - thats the slip of paper about the size of a dollar bill and filled in with dark ink or pencil mark. everybody knows how to fill out those lottery slips. even the old ladies with bad eyesight manage to fill out $10 or $20 worth of these things a week.

    when the lottery slip is run through the reader, a slip of paper is printed out giving the voter a complete run down of who he or she voted for, mirrored in machine readable form. the voter can even keep the slip they originally filled out as a private permanent record of who he or she voted for. the machinery for this is perfected, reliable, and many states already have business relationships with the companies that manufature the gear.

    plus there are all kinds of tools that can make voting more fun. at the voter's option, the voting machine can be asked to generate a random list of candidates. and voters can be randomly selected to win a grand prize. imagine how that would improve voter turnout.

    --
    when religion is no longer the opiate of the masses, governments will resort to real opiates.
  154. A face and a Name by visionsofmcskill · · Score: 1

    the number one thing about voting in booths... etc.... is you have to walk up and actualy look someone in the face.... present ID to proove your who you are... and you must do so with another human being.

    you can tell me a lot of things... retinal scans, and voice recognition.... but nothing is gonna beat a face to face confirmation.

    sorry guys... but im not with it yet

    --
    --Idiots, Every single one of YOU, A flaming mass of conglomerated morons, hey wait a second, isnt that how RAID works?
  155. UN voting very corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The UN should handle voting???

    This is the same institution that gave the Soviet Union more than a dozen votes because it counted their "Soviet Socialist Republic" colonies (Ukraine, Estonia, etc) as separate nations for voting, even though everyone knew that the Ukraine was controlled by the U.S.S.R sure was Maryland is controlled by the U.S.

    This is also the same U.N. that has shut out democratic China (Taiwan) due to the bullying of another country.

    No thanks!

    If you believe that the U.N. makes things better, I've got a safe haven in Bosnia to sell you.

    By the way, the Constitutional process in the United States worked in the 2000 election. The efforts by the losers to overthrow the election by lying in court were tossed out.

  156. Make lawyers take oath. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Thank you David Boies, superlawyer fuckup par excellance."

    If they made lawyers swear to tell the truth, Boies would be out of a job (and you would not have those frivolous McDonald's suits).

  157. John Galt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'm active in local politics (both conventional and geurilla)."

    From the Galt reference in the sig, are you an objectist? Or is that a red herring and you are really a Chomskyite Stalinist?

    1. Re:John Galt? by smack_attack · · Score: 1

      Objectivist.

  158. I don't want a paper trail by Cyno · · Score: 1

    I want my electronic voting system to be released under the GPL and get an md5sum of both the client and server binaries, which are posted publicly on the internet, as my reciept. Personally I think I should be able to vote from any computer connected to the internet at anytime I choose for all relevant (federal/state/local) items I would normally be asked to vote on. Voting is something that should not be once or twice a year but an ongoing thing. As society finds new obstacles it needs feedback from the public to make the right decisions.

    But right now I'm more worried that people don't really care whether they make a right decision or not in our current economic/political climate, as long as they make the money.

  159. LWV = partisan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real scam about the League of Women Voters is that it is just another partisan pressure group that masquerades as some sort of objective election authority. They routinely issue proclamations right in line with the output of Democratic Party focus groups.

    They don't even represent "women" as such, but instead represent a small left-wing minority.

  160. D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Objectivist"

    Oops. mispelled it. sorry.

    Then I know where you are coming from. There are a bunch of valid points to be made from "your corner", unlike the followers of Chomsky/Trotsky/etc who base everything on blatantly false assumptions (Marxian theory).

  161. It is all a conspiracy, man. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Choicepoint was commissioned in 1998 by the Florida director of elections, Ethel Baxtor, a Democrat.""

    In order for there to be a Florida conspiracy by the Republicans to steal the election, a couple of outlandish things have to be true:

    the Democrats who instituted the butterfly ballots and Choicepoint were really controlled by the Bush team.

    Al Gore, who did not believe that there were roadblocks or other such attempts to keep blacks from the polls, had to be controlled by the Bush camp. Otherwise, he would have screamed about this outrage instead of covering it up as he did.

    The NAACP is also of course controlled by Bush and the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy, or else it would have screamed about the fraud that www.indymedia.org so nicely pointed out.

  162. October 4th, 2004 by pjgeer · · Score: 1

    joe_6pak: who r u voting 4?
    L33T_1: only l00zers vote
    L33T_1: got the results a month early off Kazaa
    joe_6pak: who 1?
    L33T_1: R2D2

  163. I was in a position to throw an election by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (I'm posting anonymously for obvious reasons.)

    I've run online student body elections for my large university. It would have been trivial for me to produce whatever election results I wanted. There are so many steps in the process at which a corrupt programmer or sysadmin can fix the results. Hell, no one even checked that the results I announced matched my database!

    No, I didn't screw with a single vote, and I was quite paranoid about security at every level. But if I weren't an honest person, no one would be the wiser.

  164. Al Gore is rather lifelike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "joe_6pak: who 1? L33T_1: R2D2

    Didn't a robot just about win the 2000 election?

  165. they probably were without basis in fact by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    If Al Sharpton was the point man, I think we can pretty safely say the claims were completely fabricated.

    1. Re:they probably were without basis in fact by aborchers · · Score: 1

      That was a pointless, ad hominem troll.

      Funny, yes, but still a troll...

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  166. Only one bad reporter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't just one bad reporter. The fish rots from the head and tips the purported newspaper of record too far to the left.

    Jayson won't cancel the bad work the paper does, but this incident is bringing to light how bad it is there; hopefully to damage its undeserved reputation of credibility and fix things.

  167. Al Sharpton by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If Al Sharpton was the point man, I think we can pretty safely say the claims were completely fabricated."

    Part of the brief submitted by Sharpton claimed that Karl Rove scrawled Rush Limbaugh slogans all over Tawana Brawley.

  168. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by UserGoogol · · Score: 1

    Everything is a verb, but you might have a point. Both sides have their suckiness though, to be fair.

    --
    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
  169. From the article... by jpetts · · Score: 1

    Paul Terwilliger, director of product development at Sequoia Voting Systems

    A brother, perhaps, of one Robert Underdunk Terwilliger, a man known to have rigged at least one election, as well as having been convicted of attempteed murder!!!

    --
    Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
  170. Re:wish for web voting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It can't be completely anonymous because they need to ensure you don't vote twice.

    {strong sad voice}So I guess your system will never become reality...{/strong sad voice}

  171. Re:wish for web voting... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

    Well, you do have to be registered to vote...so, there would be verification that you DID cast your vote....that would keep your from voting > 1, but, there needs to also be a way to make sure they cannot assoc. what candidate you voted for with your ID. Maybe if there was an encrypted key structure, that would not allow them to see your vote, but, would allow you to log in and verify it...??

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  172. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with voting is that it's supposed to be secret, so there can't be a way that you could check whether your vote was recorded correctly (whereas in the case of banking this can be done).

  173. why only one counter? by timothy · · Score: 1

    In the case of paper ballots, it seems like error-checking should be used more (and earlier) than it presently is.

    1) Ballots should be designed such that they are human readable as well as machine readable (scantron-style is OK; require filling in the blank as well as choosing the right circle, and make the circles large and well separated ...)

    2) give half of the ballots to Consolidated American Votecounters, half to TallyMaster Inc, in round-number batches. Make them swap when they're done with each batch. Spot check various batches for agreement.

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
  174. Been there, done that by hreinnbeck · · Score: 2, Informative

    We've done this already in Iceland back in 2001 if I remember correctly. I must point out that we have a sophisticated identification number system (is. Kennitala) and voters used smartcards, with their kennitala to vote. I was a part of the electoral commision for the elections (Reykjavík county elections for the transfer of the capital airport) and to my surprise the elderly, who I thought would have problems with using a computer actually found it better to use. The software had numerous accessibility options, such as enlarging the typeface.

    The only networked part of the system was the voter registry, votes were counted at each polling station, verified by the regional electoral commision and then driven to City Hall and added up.

    The only sad part about electronic elections is the lack of your typical election night suspension, the polling stations closed at 22:00 and the results were announced at 22:45.

    The cost of the elections was about $450.000, higher than usual.

    Here in Iceland we have a very sophisticated telecommunications system, 100% literacy, very high computer ownership and most households are connected to the internet with about half of them having broadband connections.

    For more information: Statistics Iceland, a short summary of the Icelandic electoral process and Public strategies for the information society in Iceland (a bit dated).

    The elections were a trial that was found to have been very successful, the next elections for local government will most likely be electronic (2006).

  175. The CE problem and other tidbits by Pac · · Score: 1

    Neither Windows CE nor the previous OS were imposed by the government. Those were choices made by the bidding companies, based upon the requirements. There were other choices, but CE was considered a good choice since the source code was available to the developers (oh no!) and it could handle the graphic needs with less coding.

    I also think your take on Unicamp and USP is too harsh. There are world-class experts in any one of those two and in many more places in Brazil.

    The post you are commenting also made another mistake: the TSE does not design the machine, they just write the hardware and software specification.

    Nevertheless, the real problem is really the lack of an independent audit. I belive the general public software illiteracy allowed the Court to get away with it. But it is changing, as more Representatives are listening to technical concerns.

    1. Re:The CE problem and other tidbits by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > Neither Windows CE nor the previous OS were imposed by the government. Those were choices made by the bidding companies, based upon the requirements.

      Requirements which didn't include the necessary code audit.

      > I also think your take on Unicamp and USP is too harsh. There are world-class experts in any one of those two and in many more places in Brazil.

      Yes, there are. Yet the institutions are not trusted enough to serve as warrants of the whole process.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  176. More on 'Madame Butterfly' by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


    The Wall Street Journal of December 1st, 2000 page one states:
    "`Madame Butterfly' Theresa Le Pore wasn't always an embattled Palm Beach ballots chief. In the 1980s she moonlighted as a flight attendant on private planes owned by Saudi weapons dealer Adnan Khashoggi, a middleman in Reagan administration arms sales to Iran."

    I'm sure that's just a coincidence, though. Read more here.

    --
    - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
  177. Re:wish for web voting... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
    Well, I do worry about election hacking...but, man, do I ever wish I could vote via the internet. It is difficult to get away from work, drive across town, stand in line...etc. I'm a contract worker in IT, and time is money...and deadlines can't be missed...
    Well, if your work is more important than voting, you don't deserve to vote, and deserve to get fucked in the ass as democracy gets subverted more and more by the bourgeois.
  178. Paper Trail by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    Concerns about the need for verifiable physical artifacts of votes are VERY WELL founded. Do are concerns that machines should be OPEN and verifiable.

    Just for reference, let me point out that the paper ballot never stopped ballot stuffers. The weakest link in a security chain are the people themselves.

    There is definitely a pontential for reliable, secure elections using electronic based voting machines. But the process MUST be open.

    Points of order:

    1) Votes must be recorded simulataneously to a secure/indelible medium. In the modern age I would suggest an array of CD drives. Each drive would record identical images. The votes themselves would be digitally signed using the location, time, machineID, as a hash.

    The CDs themselves would note when they were inserted and removed and by whom (using smart Cards and fingerprints as accessors). The machines would report to a centralized database regarding all details of insertion and removal of voting CDs as well as how many voters cast their ballots on those CDs.

    Vote counting would not utilize the central database. Instead, a disc from each voting set would be place in "cakebox" style stacks. The vote counter would than read the CDs, count the votes and verify the authenticity of previously reported statistics.

    Lost CDs would IMMEDIATELY trigger investigations. As each CD has one or more physical signed copies, the votes should be recoverable. If the copies dissapear than those who voted in that precinct can revote.

    2) After voting, the voter should be granted a small printed physical card bearing their name and when they voted along with codes for record verification. If a voter is uncertain about whether their vote WAS counted, they can check a election statistics online.

    3) Machines must bear 100% Open Source digitally signed and authenticated. Voting source should be published an ENTIRE YEAR BEFORE an election. To allow for independent inspection and verification. Such source must be certified by contracted authorities to be accurate.

    4) The machines themselves must accept TAMPER-PROOF modules that can INDEPENDENTLY examine the machines and authenticate the signed source.

    Primary amongst our concerns should be election laws concerning PEOPLE.

    1) Anyone knowingly tampering with election results should be subject to SERIOUS imprisonment. Tampering with the democratic process is worse than ANY crime murder or otherwise. Conspiracy to tamper with elections should elicit the same sentence.

    2) Access to the vote should be vigorously enforced. Anyone who knowingly deprives someone of their right to vote should be sent to prison. This especially concerns bueraucrats who deprive vast numbers of voters through either malice or stupidity. Again conspiracy still applies.

    3) Voting laws must stress that the speed of an election does NOT outweigh the accuracy of an election. If a re-vote is necessary, it should happen.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  179. Should I believe you or RMS? by dglaude · · Score: 1
    A paper trail won't stop fraud. In fact, it offers any number of ballot-destruction exploits. Open software and certified, well-tested systems will stop fraud.

    Open Source or Free Software is not enough to garantee fair/honest election.
    I have a quote from Richard Stallman on that topic:

    Free software is not enough to ensure that elections are carried out properly.

    The software used in and for government should always be free software; the government should always have the freedom to run it, study its source code, change it to suit government needs, and distribute copies to others either unchanged or modified. That way, software owners will not have power over the government's computers. But that is not enough to ensure that computerized elections are fair and honest.

    It is easy for a programmer to change a program so that it tells the user "You voted for Mr Smith" but actually record a vote for Mr Brown. Unfortunately, free software does not prevent this. There is no known way to prevent this.

    With free voting software, a government election committee can study the source code. If the program has been published, anyone can study the source code. But there is no way to be sure that the program actually running when you cast your vote is the same program that you and the election committee studied. Someone could have installed a fiddled version an hour before the election and replaced it with the authorized version an hour after it ended.

    To assure honest elections, we need physical ballots that can be used for a recount.

    --
    Don't let the computer/expert control the election. Information for Belgium in french: http://www.poureva.be/
    1. Re:Should I believe you or RMS? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Stallman, as usual, is wrong.

      Physical ballots can be replaced surreptitiously as easily as software can. In either case, the problem is physical security failure.

      Paper ballots do not promise a proper recount any more than electronic ballots do in the case of compromised physical security. Even to the point that the people doing the recount are not unknown to lie about their counts. But placing the data store through multiple independently secured recount programs would be very fast, very cheap, and would immediately uncover any errors or chicanery.

      Ensuring the security of software is far easier than ensuring the physical security of transporting tons of paper ballots around the state, and while it would still be personnel intensive, would be far less expensive.

      As we saw in the Florida elections, aside from the fallibility of the punchcard ballots, the primary fallibilities were the bias of the Secretary of State and the State Troopers guarding the way to the polling places. And finally, the biased loyalties of the state and U.S. Supreme Courts.

      Redundant, secured, bias-neutralized electronic systems would go much farther towards making polls secure and trusted.

    2. Re:Should I believe you or RMS? by dglaude · · Score: 1

      RMS say software can not be trusted for election... and having that software Free Software is not enough.

      You are saying that human making the recount could try to change the result of the election.

      I say that when computer change the result of the election, there is no way to proof it, and computer can change the vote always in the same direction.

      When some human try to change the result in one direction, other human try in the other direction. So the effect of one set of human can be compensated by the other set. In Belgium, when count (and recount) are done, there are witness from each party and you are not suppose to stay alone with a balot.

      There is no way I could accept having to trust a small set of expert to tell me that the program is OK and secure. I prefere to trust many "randomly" choosen citizen that do the dirty work of counting for democracy.

      Actually the issue is not the counting, but the casting of the vote. If we let human in control of expressing their vote by using paper and pen. But we use computer for counting the vote (that can and must be recount by human) using optical scanner, then we have best of both world.

      I don't trust computer, I know too much about them.

      David Glaude
      http://www.poureva.be/

      --
      Don't let the computer/expert control the election. Information for Belgium in french: http://www.poureva.be/
    3. Re:Should I believe you or RMS? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      You don't know much about people.

      If you discount any exploit, that is the one that will eventually result in compromise of the system.

      Paper ballots won't improve the situation, they will only permit a false sense of confidence, and add both complexity and fragility to the system.

      They are a waste of time and an open exploit path.

  180. Electronic voting is evil. by pjt48108 · · Score: 1

    Voting is the process of taking an active part in determining the course of the larger constituent group to which you belong. It is at its core a very social activity. Members of a democracy ought to, for both their own good and the good of the body politic, get out at least once a year to see what the hell they are voting on, and actually walk through it, engage with it, and decide whether or not to vote it into oblivion, even. You can't judge these things accurately from an armchair, indoors. e-voting, despite it's siren call of convenience, actually works, in my view, against civic participation, by both further removing people from the society to which they belong, and by casting FUNDAMENTAL DOUBT on the outcome of ANY election (paper trails needed, etc.).

    I think that, long before we implement e-voting in the United States, we should consider either a voting holiday/weekend, or action to form smaller districts.

    First, there is no argument I can think of for maintaining the current 12-hour polling period. We are no longer a nation captained by agrarian landowners, who can go off to vote and leave the farm in the hands of those unable to vote, for lacking property rights, or even basic freedom. The largest part of the voting public works 9-5, and the traditional polling structure, in terms of the time frame, put those voters at a disadvantage and inconvenience. Some people, in fact, when faced with the choice, can legitemately claim that work is more important than voting, as food is a nearer priority than choosing between rich people playing King for a Term.

    Second, shrink districts so that the issues are more personal to the constituent, and the representatives more accountable. In fact, shrink both the districts AND the salaries--keep the reps at home working in-district, eliminating the need for pricey Georgetown housing. This may consequently price special interests groups right out of the influence game (not as easy to maintain 1,000's of offices all over the US as it is to maintain a big office in DC and get all the turkeys in one shot). Since the secrecy of a representative's voting while on-the-job is not at issue (they are public record, anyhow), the work of representation can be performed electronically, anyhow. Why go to DC anymore, except to see museums and bother the lonely resident of 1600 Penn Ave.

    A simple proposal. It'll never catch on.... sigh.

    --
    Mmmmmm... Bold, yet refreshing!
  181. Bush won same as the others by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "and see a country where the head of state got in as a result of a fraudulent election "

    Turns out when you look at the facts that Bush won the same way Clinton and the other predecessors did: he won enough states to get enough electoral votes.

    The fraud allegations were entirely without substance. If there was anything to them, the man with the most to gain (Vice President Gore) would have pursued them.

    "Nor did anyone in the US apparently even consider the idea of voiding the election and re-balloting."

    I considered this possibility, and was heartened that it was not seriously discussed. It would be extremely disruptive for the loser in an election to cause the entire Constitutional election process to be tossed out just because he lost the election. Especially when the loser (Gore) played by the rules: He played by the rules, he lost by the rules. He should not whine that he lost.

    1. Re:Bush won same as the others by SuDZ · · Score: 1

      If we did have a re-election would it be fair? I mean would people still have voted Nader if they saw mainly how it would have "almost" ended up the previous time. Would more people come out of the woodwork and have a higher turnout for the make up election? Overseas elections for people in the military?

      It would be very difficult to just have a do over in this case.

      SuDZ

  182. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by daviddill · · Score: 1
    Call your bank and ask whether they keep a paper backup of those electronic transactions.

    Of course, even if they didn't, you could read your account statements and raise hell if the numbers didn't add up. If your vote got changed inside the machine, no one including you would know. Voting is unique in that the transactions are anonymous.

    No one but an idiot and future pauper would consider doing anonymous cash transactions electronically with the kind of technology used in voting machines!

  183. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by Dannon · · Score: 1

    I read that site. A whole bunch of suspicious fluff and no substance, no proof. I voted in the 2002 Georgia election. Those machines were secure. Very.

    What these people don't take into account is that Max Cleland and Roy Barnes (the Georgia governor who was overturned by surprise) had, just before the election, offended some very powerful voting blocks in this state. Especially the teachers' unions.

    Barnes had basically laid the blame for the state's education failure on the teachers, and tried to claim credit for things that happened before his time in office. Teachers didn't like that. And there are a lot of teachers that vote in this state.

    Part of Cleland's loss was, I think, just from Georgians who were fed up with Barnes and the Democratic party in general. It also didn't help that Cleland had recently voted against a measure ensuring that Boy Scouts wouldn't be kicked out of public facilities rented to other private groups. That irked some folks I know. It also didn't help that both Cleland and Barnes had gotten very vicious and defensive about some of the "accusations" they claimed were coming from the Republicans. They didn't handle the race with poise and dignity. That hurt them.

    This web page of yours was written by someone who just doesn't believe that the Democrats could have really lost. It's got to be the machines. It's got to be a conspiracy. When Democrats are losing power, all is not right with the world, and someone (other than the Democrat) has to be blamed.

    --
    Good judgment comes from experience.
    Experience comes from bad judgment.
  184. Re:Right..... and all financial transactions onlin by uncoveror · · Score: 1
    You can't prove or disprove rigging with no paper trail to audit those machines. That is the whole reason they are untrustworthy and unacceptable. Hagel's ties to Election Systems & Software (ES&S) are a blatant conflict of interest, and that makes Nebraska stink like a fix.


    In Georgia, exit polls showed Cleland winning. Until the 2000 and 2002 elections, exit polling was always accurate. Then, all of the sudden, it was wrong. That stinks of a fix. I suppose you don't care whether the election was legit or fixed as long as your guy comes out on top. I, for one want the election to be legit even if my guy doesn't win. Hagel should be kicked out of the Senate, and Chambliss should have to face Cleland again with an auditable paper trail.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.