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E-voting Patches Skew Election?

Whammy666 writes "Wired magazine has an interesting story of how the much-maligned Diebold E-voting machines were allegedly secretely patched before Georgia state's 2002 gubernatorial election. The patches were never certified by independent testing authorities or cleared with Georgia election officials. The election produced an upset which ended in a major upset that defied all polls. A Diebold contractor tells a worrysome tale of how close to a third of the machines were crashing or locking up and how his tests showed the machines producing errors up to 25%. There are no paper audit trails with these systems so it's nearly impossible to check for fraud or malfunction after an actual election."

3 of 629 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Considering he lost the popular vote in 2000, . by sg3000 · · Score: 2, Informative

    One one hand: Bush enjoys an ailing economy, a trillion dollar deficit, the quagmire in Iraq, no found weapons of mass destruction, disturbing leaks about CIA spies, still haven't found Osama bin Laden, still haven't found the anthrax killer, the Taliban is regrouping in Afghanistan, and he's looking to bankrupt Social Security and Medicare.

    One the other hand, the CEO of Diebold is a major Bush supporter.

    Put it all together, and I smell a Bush victory in 2004!

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
  2. Re:Hard to comprehend by pla · · Score: 3, Informative

    Even my cyncial mind is having trouble grasping the immense absurdity of the problem with these machines.

    No kidding...

    I've worked in firmware (specifically, POS lotterty terminals not all that unlike the Diebold voting machines). And the level of trouble these things have caused simply astounds me. Really, it doesn't take that much effort to come up with a stable, secure, fully auditable terminal. These people control all aspects of the machines! Literally nothing unexpected can occur - No poorly-behaved third party software, no bizarre user requests (with only a handful of choices, linked to a big touchscreen button, what can they do wrong?), no external hacking attempts (on a private net physically separate from the internet)...

    If in my former work, if we had made terminals that bad, we'd have people rioting in the streets (literally). Even the few very minor flaws that came to light received front-page headlines in their respective jurisdictions (and in one case, globally), for something FAR more minor than crashes, recording the wrong user selection, or outright invalid data (yeah, *sure* three dark-horses all won by exactly 18181 votes).

    Even in worst-case scenarios, such as harware failure, opening the chassis, or a network outage, the machines should respond gracefully by offlining themselves, thus summoning a field tech. And no auditing capabilities? Gimme a frickin' break! They either lie outright (on behalf of whoever bought various elections?) on that point, or have such a broken implementation they'd rather look like idiots for omitting such a "feature" than admit how badly they screwed it up.

    But then, I coded for lottery machines, a field where large sums of money change hands. These Diebold machines "only" tally votes, thus expressing the will of the people in choosing who they want to lead them (assuming "each vote counts" has ever held true). Far less important, quite obviously. ;-)

  3. Re:Lies, Lies, Lies, and more Lies. by marick · · Score: 2, Informative

    ok, how about this one:

    http://www.firstcoastnews.com/politics/articles/ 20 02-11-05/perdue_barnes.asp

    "Perdue said there was no mystery about his victory, despite a pre-election poll suggesting Barnes was virtually a shoo-in."

    http://www.firstcoastnews.com/politics/articles/ 20 02-10-21/barnes_cleland.asp

    And the poll:

    "Democratic incumbents are leading the two big races on the Georgia ballot next month, a new survey indicates. Democratic Gov. Roy Barnes leads Republican Sonny Perdue 48 percent to 39 percent. Democratic Sen. Max Cleland leads Republican Saxby Chambliss 47 percent to 41 percent."

    Barnes lost 51-47, by the way. So to say that there was a lot of anger at Barnes, where does that appear in the poll?

    Incidentally, leading up to the election, polls were fairly consistent too:

    "An Atlanta Journal-Constitution and WSB-TV survey earlier this month showed Barnes leading Perdue 49 percent to 42 percent, with 9 percent undecided or supporting someone else, and Cleland leading Chambliss 51 percent to 42 percent with 7 percent undecided and 1 percent supporting someone else.

    That poll was conducted Sept. 26-Oct. 1... "

    If anything, Barnes had momentum leading up to the election.