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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."

4 of 629 comments (clear)

  1. The problem with this kind of story is ... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... it's in Wired. Not on, say, Fox News. (Although it would have been, no doubt, if it had been Democrats rather than Republicans doing all the screwy stuff.)

    Even if every techie in the world knows how screwed up the voting machines are, it's not going to do any good until Joe Sixpack is hearing about it over dinner. I would be willing to bet that right now, the majority of voters don't give a damn what kind of voting machine they use, and of those who do, the majority assume that anything newer and sleeker and higher-tech is thereby more reliable. The number of people who have any understanding of the problem is growing, but it's still tiny.

    What I want to know is, why aren't the politicians who have the most to lose from this issue making more noise about it? Since right now it's mostly the Republicans who seem to be benefitting, seems to me every Democratic candidate should be yelling for a major investigation right now. That's certainly what I'd expect if the situation were reversed.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  2. This is a disaster by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "She said the practice of patching systems after they've been certified opens the possibility for anyone -- from Diebold employees to local election officials -- to install malicious code on a machine that could alter election results and then delete itself to avoid detection."

    Elections in this, and many other countries, have a long history of fraud. The obtaining of power is so important to some people they will do whatever is necessary to get and maintain it. You can be certain that if there is a way to manipulate results without detection, the temptation will be too great. Countless examples riddle American election history, and yes, from both major parties.

    But this is the worst of all. Closed-sourced, buggy, patched (with what? we don't know) after certification electronic voting machines represent power without accountability. Read that again: Power without accountability. That is a recipe for disaster. All you have to do is patch things your way and, voila, you get some "odd" election results that contradict all the polls, but who cares? You're in power now, baby!

    This is a huge story, and I'm glad to see Wired covering it. But this belongs on the front page of every newspaper in the country, and on every evening newscast. Why don't we see it there? Ask yourself who owns these voting machine companies. Now ask yourself who owns the mainstream media companies. Connect the dots.

  3. amazing how Republicans keep winning elections... by sireasoning · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Let's see if I have this right.

    A Republican congressman owns a company that sells voting machines

    The voting machines are closed source with no audit trail

    The voting machines are easily manipulated by anyone with a moderate amount of knowledge of excel

    untested and uncertified patches are known to have been placed on voting machines prior to elections

    Republicans continue to defy odds and win elections that polls show them losing

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    This happened in Alabama in the latest election for our governor. Initial results showed that the incumbant democrat had won the election, then a last minute change in the figures from a district with a republican in charge of election certification swung the election to the Republican. There was no recourse for the democratic incumbant.

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    The significant problems we face cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created them. -Albert Einstein
  4. A quick review of known Diebold problems by frankie · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Most of this is discussed in detail at BlackBoxVoting. Bev Harris has a /. account; she'll probably have lots to say.
    1. Audit by security researchers reveal serious vulnerabilities
    2. Diebold downloaded ongoing ballots (a federal crime) during California's last election (not the recall)
    3. The whole "Rob-Georgia" fiasco that Wired is writing about
    4. Diebold's executives are uniformly partisan political donors
    5. Diebold's CEO is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year".
    Note that #4 and #5, while annoying, would not actually be problems except for necessary paranoia about #1-3. Voting machines need to be absolutely above reproach, since they are the ultimate instruments of modern democracy.