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Evoting in the News

key45 writes "Just a few days after California rejects Diebold E-Voting machines, and Ireland bans e-voting too, the Information Technology Association of America (which represents election equipment makers and other technology companies) released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines. The war for public opinion is on!" Reader theRG writes "The U.S. Election Assistance Commission held hearings on May 5 about the pros and cons of electronic voting machines. They debated whether or not machines should have paper trails, and what standards should be set. Meanwhile, NPR reports on California's recent decertification of Diebold machines and on one Ohio county's switch from punchcards to electronic voting." And finally, our own OSDN has a report from the election commission meeting: Joe Barr writes "Thom Wysong has a report at NewsForge this morning on the first public meeting of the new U.S. Election Assistance Commission. Questions like whether or not a voter verifiable audit trail and open source should be mandated for e-voting solutions were the order of the day."

218 comments

  1. American opinion is no measure of truth by eyeye · · Score: 3, Insightful

    More than half think that Saddam and Al-Qaeda worked together!

    --
    Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    1. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by DaHat · · Score: 1

      What? I thought the truth along with science in America was democratic!

    2. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by Three+Headed+Man · · Score: 1

      Uhh, you mean they didn't?

      --
      I'm probably at the karma cap. Mod up a funny troll instead, it lightens the mood :)
    3. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by USAPatriot · · Score: 0, Insightful
      More than half think that Saddam and Al-Qaeda worked together!
      Because it might be true?

      The proof that Saddam worked with bin Laden

      Of course Europeans think Israel is the most dangerous threat in the world, so I guess their opinions are no measure of the truth either.

      --

      Slashdot Moderation: From positive to terrible in 2 "insightful" posts.

    4. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SIG:Slashdot: News for leftist, America-hating pussies. Stuff that matters to the tinfoil hat crowd.

      If the /. crowd is that loathsome to you, why do you keep on coming back to post on it?

    5. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by LtOcelot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, if that document is real, it just proves that up until at least March of 1998 there was no relationship, and at that time someone wanted to establish one. An interesting lead that could point the way to something more substantial, but pretty tenuous by itself.

    6. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Telegraph is the most right-wing mainstream newspaper in Britain. It's also the most popular. And it's a European paper (albeit one that doesn't like other European countries). Proving:

      1. Your sweeping generalisation about Europeans is nothing more than, well, a sweeping generalisation - much of Europe is as ill-informed as much of the USA;
      2. That one right-wing paper believes that Saddam worked with Bin Laden - while pretty much every other newspaper in Europe knows that Saddam worked with Cheney and Bin Laden worked with our friends the Saudis (oh, and the CIA).

      And, for the record, it's not Sharon who gives me nightmares: apart from the 6-day War Israel has very limited experience of invading other nations, and it's arsenal of WMD is presumably very limited. My personal nightmare is a Texan.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    7. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by eyeye · · Score: 2

      Wasnt rumsfeld invited to baghdad too? Or was it cheney.

      OMG they were in it with saddam!

      Oh shit.. they actually were, weren't they ;-)

      The Telegraph (or torygraph as we call it) was one of the news outlets along with the christian monitor that falsely alleged george galloway UK MP was being paid off by Saddam.

      http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0620/p01s03-woiq.htm l

      Christian monitor (hey thats like trusting news from Islamic Jihad!) now say
      "An extensive Monitor investigation has subsequently determined that the six papers detailed in the April 25 piece are, in fact, almost certainly forgeries."

      There goes your credibility USAPatriot (hmm... nice nick!).

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    8. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by billstewart · · Score: 3, Funny
      No, no, Truth and Science in America are Republican! Just ask Rush Limbaugh....

      ..

      BTW, one reason that Ireland rejected electronic voting machines is that the "Change the vote to Republican when nobody's looking" feature was only tested in America, and it doesn't accomplish the same thing in Ireland....

      --

      Bill Stewart
      New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    9. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      an al-Qa'eda envoy was invited clandestinely to Baghdad in March 1998.

      Saddam's regime had a close relationship with al-Qa'eda.


      Talk about the nuts that wear the tinfoil hats. Here we have a newspaper claiming that a single meeting once of some people from one organization with another group from another organization means that they had "a close relationship." Nixon met with some communists in China. I guess that makes him a Chinese Maoist.

    10. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by Razor+Blades+are+Not · · Score: 1

      Interesting.

      This document purports to show a link between Al Qaeda and Hussein, but it's claimed the overtures were due to their mutual hatred of Saudi Arabia...

      Isn't Osama bin Ladens family from Saudia Arabia ?

    11. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by workindev · · Score: 2, Informative

      Saddam certainly had ties with Ansar al-Islam, which is associated with Al-Qaeda. Raids on Ansar facilities and arrests of Ansar militants have revealed Al-Qaeda documents and even video tapes of Osama Bin Laden. Bill Clinton has even claimed that there is an Iraq/Al-Qaeda tie.

      However, even if there were no Iraq/Al-Qaeda connection, Iraq was still on the top 5 list of countries that sponsor terrorism for over a decade prior to the US invasion.

    12. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by eyeye · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ties? what the fuck does "ties" mean? He had ties with the US admininstration too.

      As for Bill Clinton - he is as right wing and ill informed as many of the american public.

      American has a two party system - the right and the far right.

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    13. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Why would Saddam have ties with an organization that wants to depose him (and install an Islamic government)? All of the memos so far have indicated that Saddam was very leery of those foreign fighters who offered to help defend Iraq, telling his lieutenants to beware.

    14. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Funny, it's widely reported that the Bush administration admitted that there has been no proof tying Saddam to Al Qaeda. Why would they? The fact that they both hate the US government is not sufficient. Why would Saddam, a secular ruler, ally himself with Al Qaeda, a supposedly religious group that has called Saddam an "infidel" according to CNN? They both want each other dead, Saddam executed anyone religious because they threatened his power, and Al Qaeda wants all dictators gone so they can recreate an Islamic state.

    15. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your article is over a year old. How come there has been NO other corroborating proof? I believe those documents were proven wrong in the year since.

    16. Re:American opinion is no measure of truth by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Ansar al-Islam has mainly targeted the PUK, and since Saddam wanted very much to get rid of the PUK, it is not that far-fetched that he would help Ansar al-Islam.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
  2. US Elections 2004... by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...please, PLEASE let there be a CowboyNeal option...

    --
    These sigs are more interesting tha
    1. Re:US Elections 2004... by eepok · · Score: 3, Funny

      There is. It's called "incumbant."

    2. Re:US Elections 2004... by wwwrench · · Score: 1

      ...please, PLEASE let there be a CowboyNeal option...

      Well, if there is no CowboyNeal option, then Destroy your ballot. Might be a bit hard with E-voting though...

      Don't vote, it only encourages them!

      --

      Deconstruct the State
    3. Re:US Elections 2004... by rthille · · Score: 1

      Not that it matters. With eVoting I'm sure that even if _everyone_ clicks on CowboyNeal, Bush will still 'somehow' get elected.
      Sorry, I've been reading way too much Gregg Palast lately.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  3. Public Opinion? by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do remember that Diebold is waging a 500k/month PR war and they're no doubt buying off whoever can be bought.

    OTOH, I wonder how the results would have skewed if the poll question was preceded by "Who is Diebold?" and the question had to be answered correctly. Americans (of which I'm one) are uniformly ignorant of anything that doesn't happen on Survivor XXXVIII. It's easy to give a yes or no answer when you don't have to prove that you know anything about the subject!

    1. Re:Public Opinion? by Branc0 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I do not believe Americans (I am not one) are "uniformly ignorant". I do believe, however, that Americans tend to see technology as the solution for every problem in the world... and they trust technology to do just that!

      Maybe they think this will help the current state of Democracy/Government in the USA...

      Once again, I am not American, so I can be taking this out of my ass.

      --

      rm -rf /home/leia

    2. Re:Public Opinion? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Hey Diebold, I can be bought. Send some of that $500K/month my way.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    3. Re:Public Opinion? by david_reese · · Score: 1
      I do believe, however, that Americans tend to see technology as the solution for every problem in the world... and they trust technology to do just that!

      Disclaimer: IAAA (I am an American).
      The problem is not that Americans tend to see tech solutions for everything, but instead that Americans are very "faith-based" which is a euphemism for "not logically rigorous". In this case, they "trust" computers and technology in general, like they "trust" Microsoft and the Government.

      Being fed a healthy diet of misinformation [google cache]is no doubt part of the problem, I'm sure, but root causes also have to do with rampant consumerism, and a fairly apathetic voting public (probably due to a poorly implemented voting system).

      Related to previous story on science. in the US

    4. Re:Public Opinion? by migurski · · Score: 1
      It's easy to give a yes or no answer when you don't have to prove that you know anything about the subject!

      Indeed -- I was recently polled by a rep from the NFIB, and one of the questions was about whether I supported repealing the inheritance tax. The other poll participant I was with was just about to agree that it should be repealed, when I pointed out that it's only triggered by inheritances above $x million, and only in ~%2 of cases. The person taking the poll confirmed this, but she didn't exactly volunteer that information before I brought it up, either. It doesn't do much to engender trust in poll results.

    5. Re:Public Opinion? by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      IAAA Like most polls, this one leaves out the best options. I get most of my news off of the internet. Why no Slashdot option?

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
  4. Why, why, oh WHY? by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I find amazing is that in the face of arguably questionable performance, security, and auditing issues with e-voting machines, the vast majority of elections officials still want to move full steam rather than wait until a solid solution is developed. Remember, these are the same people that will be developing the ulcers on election night when their systems start shitting out garbage. They have to realize that they will be under extreme scrutiny. Why put yourself and your staff through this? Makes me think of payola, but that's not really realistic. Maybe the executive elections staff training is in Bermuda or Hawaii?

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by MenTaLguY · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When confronted with computers, most people lose their capacity for rational thought and fall back to wishful thinking and superstition.

      Try manning a helpdesk for a while if you don't believe me.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    2. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by StormyMonday · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maryland legislators make $37500/year. Next question?

      --
      Welcome to the Turing Tarpit, where everything is possible but nothing interesting is easy.
    3. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by john82 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Remember, these are the same people that will be developing the ulcers on election night when their systems start shitting out garbage

      Remember a few years ago? There was this national election. One side did not get the outcome they wanted from a few counties in one state. Something about not being able to determine whether a card was punched or not... No one really cared about problems or lack thereof in any other town. Just the ones in Florida.

      Anyone in a position of authority in Florida was tarred with a very big brush over a very common voting machine that a) has been in use for years, and b) was in use in other areas of the US on the same night with little or no complaint.

      So now, having publicly condemned these individuals, you are surprised that their compatriots in other jurisdictions are eager to put into use anything that is new and bears no resemblance to a punch card system.

      Essentially, this crowd will damn them NO MATTER WHAT THEY DO. And while I'm at it, to those of you filing lawsuits. If only you would put half as much effort into designing, developing and delivering a voting system that would satisfy everyone. Seems to be a lot easier to bitch about the current state than to actually try and fix it. And a lawsuit is not a fix.

    4. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

      Clue me in. Not sure what direction you're going with this.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    5. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by frankie · · Score: 2, Insightful
      same people that will be developing the ulcers on election night when their systems start shitting out garbage.

      You have it wrong. With e-voting, the administrators get to sit back and relax on election night. The results get tallied automatically, and there's no possibility of recount. If the machine says it, it must be true, end of story. Nice way to do their job.

      The election-rigging folks have had 4 years to practice. I'm confident they'll create plausible-looking results this November.
    6. Re:Why, why, oh WHY? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dodgy punch cards was a minor part of the Florida debacle. The illegal purging of 57,000 (mostly black voters incidentally) was the real crime.

      This is a matter of public record incidentally. Choicepoint, the database company in charge of the electoral roll in Florida admitted at a special Congressional hearing that they were ordered to do this. Go ahead and look it up if you don't believe me. It'll be in the records from April 17th 2001.

  5. how in the world does this matter by razmaspaz · · Score: 3, Funny

    released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines.

    If we based everything off what the majority of Americans trusted, we would get someone like George Bush for President.

    Oh wait, Damn!

    --
    I tried for 5 years to come up with a clever sig...only to realize that I am not clever.
    1. Re:how in the world does this matter by lightspawn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If we based everything off what the majority of Americans trusted, we would get someone like George Bush for President.

      No, we would get someone like Gore.

    2. Re:how in the world does this matter by SmackCrackandPot · · Score: 4, Funny

      released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines.

      Well of course, the poll was taken using electronic voting machines.

    3. Re:how in the world does this matter by GPLDAN · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Instead we have men like Jeb Bush who cajole Disney into stifling free speech, and who just yesterday removed 40,000 felons from the voter rolls - even though it was proved in 2000 that many of the people he removed were, in fact, not felons. Just Democrats. Mostly Black Democrats.

      Ol' Jebby is ALREADY starting to throw the election, and we are 6 months away from actually voting. He must have to wipe the drool off his chin when he reads about E-voting.

    4. Re:how in the world does this matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to be the whiny 'prove it' troll, but do you have any news stories regarding the latest disenfranchising?

    5. Re:how in the world does this matter by smagruder · · Score: 1

      If what you say is true, hopefully, there will be some grassroots operation to restore the franchise to most of these individuals *before* the election rolls around.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    6. Re:how in the world does this matter by Razor+Blades+are+Not · · Score: 1

      And who was running this poll anyway ? Did they use e-voting machines to collect it or what ?

    7. Re:how in the world does this matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computer, I would like to vote "No" HAL: I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that. Dave Bowman: What's the problem? HAL: I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do. Dave Bowman: What are you talking about, HAL? HAL: This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it. Dave Bowman: I don't know what you're talking about, HAL? HAL: I know you and Frank were planning to disconnect me, and I'm afraid that's something I cannot allow to happen.

    8. Re:how in the world does this matter by cheezedawg · · Score: 1, Informative

      What in the hell are you talking about?

      First of all, Disney is a private corporation- they have nothing to do with free speech. Freedom of speech does not mean that a private entity like Disney is required to distribute every crap-filled documentary that Michael Moore makes.

      And your claim about Jeb Bush is even more laughable. Jeb Bush doesn't have the authority to remove ANYBODY from voter rolls. According to Florida law, that responsibility falls on the election supervisor in each county. It was that way in 2000, also. And after all of the hoopla about the felon list in the 2000 election, the USCCR was only able to identify 4 people that were wrongly removed from voter registration, and 3 of them were allowed to vote anyway.

      But don't let the facts get in the way of our hate-filled rant.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    9. Re:how in the world does this matter by GPLDAN · · Score: 4, Informative
    10. Re:how in the world does this matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush won the initial count
      Bush won the recount
      Bush won the supreme court case
      Bush won the press recount

      But don't let facts get in the way of your Bush bashing.

    11. Re:how in the world does this matter by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Bush won the initial count

      So he did.

      Bush won the recount
      Bush won the supreme court case


      The SC case *stopped* the recount. Duh.

      Bush won the press recount

      Only with the counties that Gore wanted recounts in. A second, complete recount found that Gore would have won.

      But don't let facts get in the way of your Bush bashing.

      Oh he has plenty of facts to bash with, Mr. Pot.

  6. no indication by acceber · · Score: 0, Informative
    Based on a stratified random sample of 1000 registered voters performed for ITAA by the Winston Group, the new poll finds that 77 percent of respondents are either not very concerned or not concerned at all about the security of election systems, regardless of technology platform.
    A sample group of 1000 people is just that. A sample, and hardly reflects whether the majority of Americans trust e-voting machines or not. A thousand people do not speak for 291 million people which number the American population.
    1. Re:no indication by scd · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're ignoring the statistics of sampling. With a properly chosen sample group of 1000, you can predict with a certain confidence how correct the results are. For 1000 properly chosen people, most of these kind of studies have an uncertainty around 5%.

      Which means that you might be able to interpret this as being (77 +/- 5)%, which is meaningful.

  7. I E-Voted in FL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    An election or two ago, I voted with a touch screen voting machine. It had a red button that flashed after you voted. You just went through and picked who you wanted, were prompted for review, then on the screen, it says "HIT THE RED BUTTON". It flashed, so I pressed it and my vote was off.

    I can't see how people can't figure out how to use the voting machines around here.

    1. Re:I E-Voted in FL by eepok · · Score: 1

      Well the problem here in Orange County is that if you "hit the red button" on accident before you were done completing your ballot, the machine would send it off then and there anyway. Not to mention that our Orange County Diebold machines are contoled by a wheel, not the intuitional arrow keys. Remember that when you say "Well I can do it just fine!" you are most likely a curve breaker as you have a better understanding of technology (as most Slashdot users do) than about 95% of all voters. Then again, your "I can't see how people can't figure out how to use the voting machines around here." comment shows you have a lesser understanding of society as a whole.

    2. Re:I E-Voted in FL by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Was there a paper trail? (A hardcopy that shows who the vote was cast for anonymously) If not, then it's not safe from manipulation. Was it open source? If not, then there's no way to prevent a company from fixing the elections through closed source 'black box' software. Those are the two conditions that need to be satisfied for me to trust e-voting. I don't care about 'ease of use.' I use Windows all day, so I think I can figure out just about any voting system, now matter how illogical or convoluted.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  8. Who cares what most Americans think? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is that at all relevant? Either the machines are reliable and trustworthy, or they aren't. This can't be altered by the opinions of a bunch of people who know nothing about it.

    If the machines are not rigorously trustworthy, and provably so, they should not be used. End of story. What Americans think is irrelevant.

    If the machines are totally secure and reliable, but most Americans don't trust them, they still shouldn't be used. The voting system not only has to be trustworthy, but has to be seen to be trustworthy. If machines are more reliable, faster and more secure than paper, then election authorities should try to persuade the public that they are reliable, but until the public so believes, they should not be used to determine the result of an election.

    1. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by eepok · · Score: 1

      Oh... silly you. Where you from? Britain? France. Figures. Here in the good U S of A we don't give a dag nab about what them "know it all" smarties think. We have gut instinct here and that's good enough for me.

    2. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by Poor+College+Student · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think people not in IT have a perception that large quality software projects are easy to do. Plus, the general public probably has not followed this particular story (or probably at least outside of California).

      Yeah, maybe a Windows app might crash every now and then, but it doesn't entirely alter that non-technical person's perception of industry.

      On the other hand, we know that flaws exist all the time. Many of us here feel that at least of any software, that the software used in voting machines outght to be available. We know that software needs plenty of testing before its put into production.

    3. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by tsg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If the machines are not rigorously trustworthy, and provably so, they should not be used. End of story. What Americans think is irrelevant.

      You are absolutely correct, but the problem is that what Americans think tends to drive public policy. People vote for those who support their views, even if their views are demonstrably wrong. That so many people trust the machines means that not enough people know how bad they are and is an indication that the people need to be educated, not that the machines should be used.

      So, yes, what Americans think is irrelevant to whether the machines should be used, but is compeletely relevant to whether they will be used.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    4. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by asdffdsa · · Score: 1

      Either the machines are reliable and trustworthy, or they aren't. This can't be altered by the opinions of a bunch of people who know nothing about it. Trustworthiness is the opinion of a bunch of people. It's their judgments about whether to trust the system that make it trustworthy or not. There is no objective standard.

    5. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Heh, who the Americans actually vote for could be irrelevant too if the vote results get diebolded.

      As for the poll results, maybe they were diebolded too :).

      --
    6. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by sadler121 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      NO, its what corporations think is what drives public policy. Voting is a SHAME, used by the goverment, political parties, PAC's and lobbying gruops to certify their power much like Saddam Hussain can claim that he is the rightful ruler of Iraq because he got 100% of the popular vote.

      Americans no longer live in a republic, we live in an oligarchy, and get use to it, because the mindles, brain dead people who are about 99% of the population of the US GIVE A DAMN about real FREEDOM and LIBERTY, as long as their screwing and eating, they dont give a damn about being FREE.

      Theres no hope left for another revolution like we had back in 1776.

    7. Re:Who cares what most Americans think? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This can't be altered by the opinions of a bunch of people who know nothing about it.

      You might not realize it, but opinion counts for everything. Facts are completely, utterly, and absolutely, when it comes to elections in theus. The only thing that matters is what the sheeple believe. And the sheeple believe pretty much anything that they are told.

      Remember the guy who was elected to the senate, because the sister of the incumpent was a thesbian. People figured that a thesbian was a bad thing to be, and so voted against the incumbent.

      Also remember the city that was about ban water, because of the harmful effects that H2O has on some people.

      Then there is the supreme court ruling on the botanical status of tomatoes.

      Or for those who really like the nitty gritty, remember that the metric system was officially adopted in the united states over 150 years ago.

      If the machines are not rigorously trustworthy, and provably so, they should not be used. End of story.

      The machines have been found to be untrustworthy, and results are easilly manipulated. Anybody who dials into one, can alter the votees, with nothing to indicate that the votes have been tampered with.

      You're forgetting that Diebold has promised that the entire country will elect shrub as president, regardless of who they actually vote for.

      If machines are more reliable, faster and more secure than paper, then election authorities should try to persuade the public that they are reliable, but until the public so believes, they should not be used to determine the result of an election.,/p>

      Those machines are demonstraable vunerable to so many cracks, hacks, and other nefarious things, that the Daily Machine would be embaressed by how crooked the machines are.

  9. Split the difference by proverbialcow · · Score: 1

    Give everyone a card with a magnetic stripe, have them register their vote, and have the machine encrypt that information with its public key onto the card, along with date and time. Encode in plaintext the number of the machine. Give each machine a different key, and have them keep track of all the votes registered on it. That way, there's no trail that can be traced back to original voters, and the voters have a method of contesting the results if they think something's fishy.

    When I worked at a hotel, those magnetic plastic keys cost us about $0.09 each when we bought them in packs of 5,000. Buy them in packs of 500,000 and I bet you get a better price.

    --
    The only surefire protection against Microsoft infections is abstinence. - The Onion
    1. Re:Split the difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A majority of the idiots around here are gonna lose their card.

    2. Re:Split the difference by KojakBang · · Score: 1
      Sure... then what you will have is various lobbying groups and/or companies which will give people FREE if they can show that they voted for a particular candidate and what do you have? An election that's fixed by offering the millions of sheep of this country free burgers/discounts/shirts/whatever to vote for what that group wants.

      I like the idea of the paper receipt that drops behind glass so the person can see it, then goes into a bin. That way, you can't bribe voters for their votes.

      --
      "There are two major products that come out of Berkeley: LSD and UNIX. We don't believe this to be a coincidence."
    3. Re:Split the difference by KojakBang · · Score: 1

      Oops, first line should read "... FREE stuff..."

      --
      "There are two major products that come out of Berkeley: LSD and UNIX. We don't believe this to be a coincidence."
  10. Re:Those of us in the know... by daymitch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, This may be a bit inflammatory, but I think your comment demands some, umm, comment.

    First, I'm going to ask for clarification. Is voting a game of big numbers or is voting a game of small numbers? Your comment supports the first then instantly switches to the opposite point. My one vote doesn't count, then, suddenly, we have a close race and it counts. Which is it?

    I'll reveal my personal stance on the voting machines. Big, Bad Idea. The darling old ladies who serve as ballot judges in my local precinct have eyes like hawks, but they can't see potential voter fraud on a purely electronic platform. This is a clear case of a manufacturer using its superior resources to push an agenda against the public interest.

    Plus, I insist that my vote does matter. It's not all presidential politics. Local referenda on city and county issues can directly affect my quality of life. In a race where voter turn-out is maybe 3,000 folks, my vote definitely counts. Heck, a guy of meager income like me can even swing an election through personal effort alone.

    Time to quit bitching and get off the apathy wagon, kids.

  11. And for quite some time, the majority ... by burgburgburg · · Score: 2, Insightful
    of people believed that asbestos was safe. Who'd like to chow down to an asbestos sandwich now?

    Having an industry tell me that the majority of people are uninformed, misunderstand or are unconcerned about major failures of their product is not particularly presuasive in my book.

  12. In other news by kcornia · · Score: 2, Funny

    The Tobacco Industry Supporters Organization of America has released a study showing a majority of Americans think smoking is good for you and should be encouraged!

  13. And who built the polling machines? by Jtheletter · · Score: 2, Funny
    How much do you want to bet that the poll was taken using the evoting machines in question?

    [Sarcasm] Yeah, those numbers are totally reliable and will definitely reflect the average American opinion. [/Sarcasm]

    --
    -- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
  14. Campaign for Verified Voting in Maryland by plsuh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you're in Maryland and want to help out, come join us at www.truevotemd.org. We have a lawsuit going to force the state to decertify the Diebold machines, and we're also planning a number of other public actions to raise awareness and put pressure on our elected and appointed officials. Linda Schade, one of the co-directors, was a speaker at the press conference that MoveOn held outside the EAC hearing.

    --Paul Suh

  15. Wouldn't you need a biometric for e-voting by BrentRJones · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Would you need a fingerprint scan to verify that you only vote one time?

    How would the Voter Verifiable Audit Trails (VVAT)work? Could I check online to see that my vote was recorded correctly?

    --
    Help end the use of Sigs. Tomorrow
    1. Re:Wouldn't you need a biometric for e-voting by Luyseyal · · Score: 3, Informative

      You vote at the poll on the machine. The machine records the vote locally (and later to the poll team and later to the central office). The machine prints out a scantron. You check the bubbles are right for your vote and put it in the box.

      The machine vote is the main vote, the scantron is just a backup. The backup will later be used to check the machine vote. Due to printing errors, there will be statistical anomalies taken into account and some will be checked by hand.

      Hackers would have to fool two separate, complementary systems: machine and optical scan.

      You would NOT have the ability to verify your vote over the Internet or ex post facto as this breaks secret balloting.

      -l

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    2. Re:Wouldn't you need a biometric for e-voting by tgw · · Score: 1


      There are some links posted at the bottom of the Newsforge article that address the issue of Electronic VVAT.

  16. Re:Apparantly you don't read the REAL news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent post should be modded insightful not troll.

  17. Paper trail? by scaltagi_the_pirate · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Can anybody enlighten me on why it is so difficult to insist that voters approve their ballot on paper? I guess some think that since it is a computer, it wont make a mistake and computers are here to rid us of paper anyway. It just confuses (and scares) me.

  18. Open Source Evoting by Cirrocco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am appalled at the absolute paranoia that these companies experience regarding their 'proprietary' software used to run e-voting machines.

    Look, folks, it isn't that hard! If situation X occurs, then y (being the number of votes for Situation X) = y + 1. At the end, y = the number of votes for (candidate, proposition, measure, etc.) z.

    Simple! *I* could probably program the stupid thing, and I've got CRAP for programming skills! Why does this need to be proprietary? Why does it need to be so damned EXPENSIVE?

    1. Re:Open Source Evoting by foidulus · · Score: 1

      Well, a company is probably going to have to do it regardless, because people are going to demand indemnity if things fuck up, and they are going to want certified tech support.
      However, I think an open source implentation could be viable provided you can find a company that would support it. It will be safer, and quite possibly chepaer than the proprietary system.

    2. Re:Open Source Evoting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call bullshit. It would indeed be "Simple!" to count vote totals. It is not, however, nearly so simple to bulid a system which counts vote totals and does so verifiably and securely.

      I agree with you about the ridiculous cost of these systems.

  19. Most don't care by lythic1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A huge chunk of "registered voters" don't even care enough to vote, even few more give a whoop beyond that. Of those who do desire a secure vote, I'm betting more than 70% think the machines are insecure, and it's this group that needs to be convinced.

  20. Ireland didn't ban e-voting by batgimp · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ireland didn't ban e-voting. We merely postponed it. We've already had e-voting machines used in an election two years ago (in a few consituencies on a trial basis). This summer, the Irish government tried to introduce e-voting in every county, and was met with protests. It was taken completely by surprise, and set up a commission to look into the matter and report back with a recommendation. I'm pretty sure that this commission was just set up to reassure the "Luddite" public, and tell them that everything was ok.

    To everyone's surprise, the commission said that there wasn't enough time to guarantee the accuracy and security of the machines, and that their introduction should be postponed until such things could be guaranteed.

    So, it hasn't been banned, just postponed.

    1. Re:Ireland didn't ban e-voting by aecolley · · Score: 1
      > So, it hasn't been banned, just postponed.

      That's the current line from the Irish Government, anyway. They're hoping the commission which damned the e-voting system will come to its senses when they complete more tests, and that they will turn around and give it a big wet seal of approval.

      Of course, since they've wasted^H^H^H^H^H^Hinvested over EUR50 million on the system already, and our country is small enough that this isn't small change, they're not exactly likely to own up and admit that they're guilty of misappropriating public funds. At least not until after the elections this June.

      But anyway. My advice is to keep pushing the fact that computer security experts are united and unequivocal in rejecting e-voting systems unless they involve a voter-verified paper ballot (also called a voter-verified audit trail). This is what seemed to have the most effect in Ireland. Start with the Association for Computing Machinery, then Dr Rebecca Mercuri, then Bruce Schneier, and so on...

      --Adrian.

  21. remember this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    back when the US invaded Afghanistan, a majority of Americans didn't know the difference between the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

    1. Re:remember this? by razmaspaz · · Score: 1

      back when the US invaded Afghanistan,

      But they do now?

      --
      I tried for 5 years to come up with a clever sig...only to realize that I am not clever.
  22. Scanned paper ballots by crow · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My favorite voting method is paper ballots where you fill in ovals with a black marker and then feed them into a scanner. You get the advantage of nearly instant results after the polls close with the advantage of a full paper trail for a manual recount if necessary. And when they did a recount when the vote for our new high school failed by 29 votes, it changed it by 6 votes, indicating that some people didn't fill in the ovals correctly, but only a very tiny percentage.

    And, of course, our public education is increasingly geared towards teaching kids how to properly fill in ovals.

    Of course, if we had had fully-electronic voting, I might not have lost the town election on Tuesday (I was a candidate for Selectman, which is roughly the equivalent of city council). :)

    1. Re:Scanned paper ballots by PaschalNee · · Score: 1

      Better would be where you fill on the vote on a computer and the computer prints out your vote slip in a computer and human readable format. This slip then gets scanned by the vote counter and retained for later recounts. That means you don't run into the "some dolt filled in two ovals" situation as the computer would force a valid vote (or spoiled vote where you want to offer the option of a spoiled "I vote for the turkey" vote).

    2. Re:Scanned paper ballots by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Not really, because people would probably not verify the printout as being correct. Automated counting systems are perhaps decent shortcuts for getting a good idea of the outcome of an election quickly, but in the end it needs to be human beings looking at ballots that were directly filled out by human beings.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  23. People think its secure?? by panic911 · · Score: 1

    Hasn't enough proof been shown that they AREN'T secure? How can people possibly think they are. I am totally for e-voting, but the software needs to be written by someone who knows the difference between their ass and their elbow (/me slaps diebold around with a large trout).

  24. League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Luyseyal · · Score: 4, Informative
    The League of Women Voters opposes voter-verified paper trails. More.

    -l

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    1. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by DoomHaven · · Score: 1

      Man, that's just twisted!

      I mean, really, that's just wrong. Completely and utterly wrong. That, not just one person, but a lot of people had to think of that. I imagine people letting women vote. What will they think of next?

      For the humour-impaired, yes, I'm kidding. A woman's vote is just as important as a man's vote, as in, not at all.

      --
      "Don't mind me cutting myself on Occam's Razor"
    2. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Tran · · Score: 1

      I love the comment, also mentioned by Diebold, that computer experts have no clue about teh election process, ie teh management of the voting process.
      Well form all the articles i have read, it is celar Diebold and many of the election officals do not have a handle on the management process either; lets see - the ones i recall of fthe top of my haed: taking vote counts remotely during voting, certifiers leaving before the end of the certification process but certifying machines anyway; leaving voting machines unsecured and unguarded in accessible areas.
      Seems to me the computer geeks worrying about the process and machines already know at least one thing more than Diebold or these election comissioners....

    3. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      I'm not really convinced by their arguments.

      "VVPT systems are not certified." That doesn't mean they CAN'T be, does it?

      They say that printers jam, etc, then in the next line item, they say paper records are required by Fedreal law.

      I also don't see how VVPT really prevent disabled or non-English speaking people from voting properly, the argument doesn't specify. If they can't grab a slip of printed paper, I don't see how a touch screen is going to be that much better. The printing can be dynamically multi-lingual based on user selection.

      I don't see VVPT really being a problem. They say VVPT isn't foolproof, but really no election system is foolproof.

    4. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by budgenator · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just completed a poll of the League Women Voters member and in a sampling 1000, 77% +- 5% always get a paper reciept when making an ATM financial transaction

      Ok the poll part is made up, but my experience is that there is a trend, the more a person knows about computer programming and or administration, the more likely he or she is to want a paper trail for transactions of any type.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    5. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Luyseyal · · Score: 1
      They say that printers jam, etc, then in the next line item, they say paper records are required by Fedreal law.

      VVPT are paper records seen and used by voters at the time the ballot is cast. "Records" are just printouts the polling places get from the machines' electronic counts.

      I also don't see how VVPT really prevent disabled or non-English speaking people from voting properly, the argument doesn't specify. If they can't grab a slip of printed paper, I don't see how a touch screen is going to be that much better.

      If the paper trail is the ballot, then they have a point about the disabled not being able to have a secret ballot: someone still has to "hold their hand", so to speak. OTOH, if the paper trail is just a backup, it's less of an issue. The main thing is you should NOT be able to look up your vote on the Internet. That's just an invitation for abuse and breaks secret balloting.

      The printing can be dynamically multi-lingual based on user selection.

      Yep, and if it's a scantron, the computer won't care what language it's in as long as A, B, C, or D is properly marked by the printer.

      I don't see VVPT really being a problem. They say VVPT isn't foolproof, but really no election system is foolproof.

      Agreed.

      -l

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    6. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by bug506 · · Score: 1

      One of the arguments the League of Women Voters makes on this page is that people with disabilities and people who cannot read English will not be able to verify the paper trail, so it will disenfranchise them.

      While this argument makes sense, your analogy with the ATM can be extended to counter their argument. Modern ATMs use braille and headphones to let blind people use them. Just because they cannot read the receipt that ATMs provide, does that mean that no ATM should provide paper receipts?

      The situation is the same for the voting machines. Assuming the machine is required to produce a paper record for each individual's vote, a blind person would not be able to read it. Does that mean that NO ONE should be able to verify their vote?

      Their argument is that since blind people cannot verify the paper, we should ALL trust the machines to record the votes electronically. It would make more sense for the LARGE MAJORITY of people who can verify their votes to ensure that the machines are accurate.

      If the machine is spitting out ballots that do not match the intention of the voters, the majority of people who can verify their ballots would notice there was a problem, and this problem could then be corrected. In this way, even though not everyone is able to verify the paper ballot, a sufficient number are able to verify that the machines are producing valid paper ballots. (This holds true unless the machines are misrecording the votes of only blind people.)

      Alternatively, how about the idea I've seen mentioned by others on slashdot before. One machine produces a ballot the user can read in a standard format. The blind/illiterate voter takes this paper ballot and puts it into another machine (made by another vendor) that reads the ballot to the blind/illiterate voter.

      Joey

    7. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by brauwerman · · Score: 1

      What is the LWV smoking? That position paper make zero sense.

    8. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Please accept my comments on your position paper.

      | Electronic Voting Machines and Voter-Verified Paper Trails (VVPT)
      | http://www.lwv.org/join/elections/hava_dre-vvpt.ht ml
      |
      | The League of Women Voters strongly supports full and equal
      | voting rights for all eligible Americans, including persons
      | with disabilities. The League also supports voter
      | verification of ballots, including the requirement in the
      | Help America Vote Act (HAVA) whereby the voter verifies the
      | ballot before it is cast and counted. However, the League
      | does not support proposals for a new requirement for
      | paper-based voter verification - the voter-verified paper
      | trail (VVPT) system that would require Direct Recording
      | Electronic (DRE) voting machines to provide an individual
      | paper confirmation for each ballot for each voter to verify.
      |
      | A VVPT requirement undermines voting access for people with
      | disabilities or limited English proficiency, raises costs,
      | fails to guarantee security, unnecessarily complicates the
      | voting process, undermines federal certification standards,
      | and slows the replacement of outdated voting machines.

      To be clear, VVPT would require DRE equipment to print out a
      physical paper receipt that the voter could review and then
      stuff in the ballot box. These printed ballots would then
      be the official record of the election.

      These printed ballots would:

      - be printed out when the user has completed selecting all
      of their choices via the DRE's touch screen interface

      - would only print out the individuals selected, and thus
      is very simple to understand and uncluttered

      - would be printed in the language used by the DRM machine,
      cross-language support on paper is quite easy

      - be in large font for reading impaired and could be handed
      to an election worker to read for those who are blind

      - would have an encoded version of the votes via a bar-code to
      make scanning in the votes for semi-automated recounts easy

      - would be printed on card stock using your average laser
      or inket printer; thermal paper does not last long enough

      To be more concrete about this, and to make it absolutely clear what
      we are discussing, there is an open source application [1] with an
      on-line demo [2] that produces this sort of printed receipt [3]. Be
      advised that the user interface for making the selections is not
      important to this discussion, the only thing that is salient is the
      final receipt printed.

      [1] http://www.openvotingconsortium.org/
      [2] http://gyaku.pair.com/~vote/ballot2.html

      With this background, let me address your specific concerns. Before
      you continue with this statements, I ask you to download the
      referenced PDF file above and print this so that you can see exactly
      what is being requested by the VVPT community.

      | * The voter-verified paper trail requirement undermines
      | voting access. DREs make it possible, for the first
      | time, for persons with visual disabilities or limited
      | manual dexterity to cast secret and independent ballots.

      The VVPT does not replace DREs. People would still use touch screens
      to make their choices. The printed 'receipt' would be in the
      individual's language and printed in a large enough font so that it is
      absolutely clear.

      | Because DREs can be programmed in multiple languages,
      | voters with limited English proficiency can participate
      | fully and equally. The millions of Americans who face
      | literacy challenges also can take advantage of the audio
      | features of DREs to cast independent votes without
      | embarrassment.

      There is no reason why the printed receipt cannot print out results in
      the voter's choice of language. During an official manual recount, it
      would be a very small task to teach each person recounting the very
      small subset of the languages they encounter when recounting.

    9. Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails by Torne · · Score: 1

      Damn, I wish I still had mod points. Mod parent up, this is a *fantastic* explanation.

  25. e-voting in MD by cagle_.25 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    We used the machines to vote in the MD primaries. I mentioned to one of the poll workers that I was extremely uncomfortable with e-voting, and he just shrugged.

    The bottom line is that (IMO), e-voting will win the day because

    it looks slicker than paper votes

    it's easier on polling officials

    the lack of serious recount ability will make all election outcomes final, which will substantially reduce the uproar in contested elections.

    In short, e-voting is pitched towards the masses. It's sad, but likely inevitable.

    --
    Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
    1. Re:e-voting in MD by Znork · · Score: 1

      You're quite likely right.

      That certainly is a boon to my world domination plans tho. I'm looking forward to the lack of uproar as the Znork for Lifelong Dictator option gets 100% of the votes.

    2. Re:e-voting in MD by smagruder · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm an idiot or a rare person, but I don't give a flying fark whether voting equipment is "easier on polling officials". They can go straight to Hell if these morons think they are going to compromise our precious democracy just so they can have an easy day in the shade sipping their lemonade.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  26. E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by lythic1 · · Score: 2, Informative
    Kim Alexander, President of the California Voter Foundation is the main speaker: "Computerized Voting: The Solution or the Problem?". Hosted by the California League of Women Voters, in tribute to Dr. Who writer Jane Baker today, 11:30 - 2, San Mateo Marriott, $60 at the door. Lunch is included. Call 650 342-5853 to reserve a seat, or stop by!

    http://csmc.ca.lwvnet.org/calendar.html

    1. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by Luyseyal · · Score: 1
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    2. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      This is interesting. Please tell me more about what is on the lunch menu. Thanks.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    3. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by ColonelPanic · · Score: 1

      Hosted by the California League of Women Voters, in tribute to Dr. Who writer Jane Baker...

      Now *that's* going to make the general public take the issue more seriously! I'll relax now.

      --
      "Skill shows through where genius wears thin." -Wittgenstein || Religion: uniting aviation and architecture.
    4. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by lythic1 · · Score: 1
      Yep, I'm not sure if they're part of the problem or part of the solution, but they're a prominent organization confronting E-voting. As the speaker is in favor VVPT (http://www.calvoter.org/news/releases/043004relea se.html), it'll be an interesting conference. I have my little list of questions. Are there any you suggest that I ask?

      E-voting machines were originally chosen BECAUSE they were paperless, to replace paper ballots after the pregnant-chad fiasco, so I understand why the LWV would be hesitant about adding paper at this late step. The only problem with this is that E-voting was even less secure in the 2000 Presidential election than paper ballots were, and no one seems to have noticed this. They also trusted the corporations to do a good job. Which they didn't. Oops.

      I was reading your comments about controlled source, and did not understand them. Were you saying that the LWV was against open-sourced code, or that they wanted the government to have access to the code?

    5. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by lythic1 · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid that Dr. Who may be about as tech-savvy as the LWV gets. Maybe the cybermen can teach them a bit about Internet security?

    6. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by Luyseyal · · Score: 1
      Question for Speaker: What's up with national being against paper trails?

      (From what I understand, they're afraid that the paper trail becomes the ballot instead of the machine count which makes it harder for disabled persons to have a secret ballot (need someone else to check the paper).)

      Follow-up Question: If the paper trail were like a Scantron, would this alleviate national's concerns about huge handcounts (instead of just a few needing manual intervention)?

      Question 3: The League wants source code to be available to officials, but think that allowing the public to review it will mean that people might find flaws in it! <gasp>! What is wrong with the code and process being completely open and documented so guys like Bruce Schneier can review the code and the system that supports it?

      -l

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    7. Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kim Alexander is actually a major opponent of e-voting without a paper trail. So, to give the League credit, they've invited a speaker who disagrees with their own position on this issue. Check out http://www.calvoter.org - Ben

  27. Magic! by slashrogue · · Score: 0

    a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines.
    I'm sure most of those Americans also think that computers work on magic and don't even begin to comprehend how things work under the hood. Same way most people are with cars, etc.

  28. Re:Those of us in the know... by wwest4 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think successful machines might yield greater turnout, which might clarify where people stand at any given time and provide a more accurately appointed set of leaders. In that sense, I hope we CAN implement more accurate voting, but I think we need to do it in such a way as to minimize the chance of corruption. Even if Diebold doesn't intend to leave the door open, so far they have and that shouldn't be ignored if we want this technological advancement to succeed.

    > Your one vote makes little difference in the final outcome of the election.

    I've always thought that this was an unfortunate existential conundrum. From a certain view, yes - in the end, the ordinary voter is just a speck of dust on the political landscape - but you could view every action you take in life the same way from the appropriate perspective.

    I am only responsible for my vote, no one else's - and even if it only matters to a tiny degree, that is infinitely more than zero, which is fine for me right now. America is still an adequately free place in the sense that there are other forums besides the voting booth with which I can increase the awareness of my position if I wish. My vote and my actions can "matter" in this sense as much as I choose.

    > Just consider all the dolts who blew Gore's chance in 2000 by voting with their
    > heart for Nader.

    Maybe if Gore had been more liberal he would have gotten Green votes. I wouldn't have voted for him in either case, but the moral is that this is just the way the cookie crumbles (ignoring the closeness of the results for simplicity).

  29. Why doesn't the govt produce the code? by codepunk · · Score: 1

    Why doesn,t then govt produce both the code and the machines. Produce the code in a open manner subject to anyones review.

    --


    Got Code?
    1. Re:Why doesn't the govt produce the code? by Log+from+Blammo · · Score: 1

      But that plan does not provide sufficient kickbacks to corporate campaign sponsors!

      The process for review would be tightly bound in red tape, and anyone using it would be investigated by the FBI. It would also overrun its budget by 30000% and take 20 years longer than necessary. At the end of that time, it would be obsolete and completely unusable, so of course they would have to do the whole thing over again.

      --
      "This quote is a product of the Frobozz Magic Quote Company."
  30. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That was really unfunny. I've seen some dumb posts in my day. Hell, I've made some! *guffaw* But OMFGROR, that was just stupid.

    There is a write way and a wrong way to troll. Your post is a shining example of what happens when people who don't know any better try to do it.

    1. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      No kidding. I had to go look at tubgirl just to get the stench of that post out of my brain.

  31. Statistics 101 by NetDanzr · · Score: 2, Informative
    A sample group of 1000 people is just that. A sample, and hardly reflects whether the majority of Americans trust e-voting machines or not.

    Very rarely, polls are conducted with significantly more than 1000 respondents. The marginal decrease of the sampling error beyond 1000 observations is too small to make a larger sample worthwile. 77% being in favor of e-voting machines is pretty damn significant, and it can be said that the majority of all 291 million Americans is in favor of them (of course, I'd need to know the standard deviation of the sample to be absolutely positive).

    That doesn't rule out other errors, though, such as a sampling bias. If the pollsters picked 1000 employees of e-voting machines manufacturers, that would be a voting bias. So would be if they picked 1000 Slashdotters. However, arguing that the poll result is wrong because the sample was comparativelly small is wrong.

  32. What about learn from other people for a change? by agoliveira · · Score: 1

    Here in Brazil have e-voting for years and the same technology is used in several other countries. Can't the USA just admit it can learn something from a "developmment country" and come down here to see how we did it?
    I don't want to start a flame war but sometimes I think that most of the USA people keep their noses too high.

    --
    Scientia est Potentia
  33. ...discovered in Baghdad by The Telegraph.. by burgburgburg · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Iraqi intelligence documents discovered in Baghdad by The Telegraph have provided the first evidence of a direct link between Osama bin Laden's al-Qa'eda terrorist network and Saddam Hussein's regime.

    With the British presses high journalistic standards, I trust that The Telegraph on their own found the conclusive proof that Saddam worked with bin Laden. I also believe in Sasquatch.

  34. Who answers these polls anyway? by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If a completely random selection of several thousand people occurs for every one of these polls, why is it that no one I know of has ever been a participant? I suspect it is more like the Nielsen ratings, where specific individuals who are supposed to be representative are involved each time.

    The other thing that wasn't clear is whether trusting e-voting in general means anything related to trusting companies like Diebold. The very action California took to reject Diebold, while not rejecting e-voting in general, sends the message that it is possible to have trustworthy e-voting.

    We have come a long way toward getting paper voting to be relatively secure and reliable. In spite of that, we heard all about dimples and miscounts in 2000. We can't expect the first few trial runs of e-voting to instantly be problem free.

    --
    I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
  35. Why not use telephones? by pointbeing · · Score: 0
    If we're concerned about hacking why not just vote using POTS instead of computers?

    One issue would be non-repudiation, but once we've figured out a way to make sure people are who they say they are voting via telephone should be a pretty simple process to implement.

    --
    we see things not as as they are, but as we are.
    -- anais nin
  36. Those machines are junk by m.dillon · · Score: 2, Informative
    I voted using one of those machines in the last election. I've never seen a worse, design, rittled with security issues and no verification mechanisms at all. Thank god they've been banned!

    There was no receipt, no way to determine after the fact whether my vote actually made it out of the polling place, or even if it was properly recorded. The machines should never have been allowed to be used in the first place.

    -Matt

  37. & they require control of source! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i was fully prepared to be pissed off, but their statement (rather quietly) states that the source should be in the hands of the people in charge.

    that's great. it'd be even better if the people in charge could be required to understand it.

    1. Re:& they require control of source! by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      I'm just annoyed that they pooh-pooh VVPT through an either/or fallacy: "Either electronic only or crappy handcount paper receipts." Nevermind that the printout could be a scantron ballot that would be easy to verify by people and computers. The e-vote could still be the real vote, but the scantron would give a chance for people to doublecheck and stand as a backup. The backups can also be used to check the e-votes weren't compromised.

      Good point about the source, though. I mean, how many state employees know what a buffer overflow is? Still, the real problems with Diebold et al. have been endemic to the social system surrounding the software (e.g., pushing uncertified updates, having poor corporate security, etc.), not so much on the hackers.

      -l

      --
      Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
  38. PR war has more than one side by FreshnFurter · · Score: 1

    Apparantly not only Diebold is trying to convince the public a Washington Post editorial gives a fair overview of the current situation in a readable way. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A701 2-2004May6.html Registration might be necessary to read the article

  39. Ireland "bans" evoting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ireland hasn't banned e-voting- it's just not using it in the votes which are due to happen this summer.
    It's actually doing exactly the opposite: the government here has is pushing through a bill making e-voting legal- without allowing the slightest bit of debate over it by the opposition parties...
    Ahh democracy, a load of bollix.

  40. Automating traditional forms of election fraud... by MioceneMan · · Score: 1

    That's what these machines are good for, and I'm afraid that's why some election officials are defending them. The fact that "electronic" votes can't be audited or recounted is another "feature."

    These electronic voting machines are a dream come true for those who want to subvert democracy.

  41. Slight problem by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

    Information Technology Association of America ... released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines.

    Yeah, but the majority of Americans are stupid, especially when it comes to technology.

    The point is that these machines are not WORTHY of that trust.

  42. War for public opinion by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 4, Informative

    Personally, I spent Tuesday (local election) passing out the following flyer:

    Will Your Vote Be Counted?

    Diebold

    • Produces the "Accuvote" touch-screen voting machines used in Virginia and at least 36 other states.
    • Made over 40,000 internal company files, including passwords, encryption keys, source code, and user manuals, available to internet hackers worldwide.
    • For a step-by-step guide on how to modify the votes in a Diebold-controlled election, see www.equalccw.com/dieboldtestnotes.html
    • Despite Diebold's promises to tighten up security after two independent investigations in July and September, a third investigation in March of yielded the following quote:

      Diebold

      "basically had no interest in putting actual security in this system," said Paul Franceus, one of the consultants. "It's not like they did it wrong. It's like they didn't bother."

    • In the the recent California audit, Diebold's own lawyers admitted that their client had "probably broken the law." Frustrated investigators asked whether Diebold was lying, or only "trying to be misleading" in their answers. Here's what Bob Urosevich, president of Diebold Election Systems, had to say for himself:

      We were caught. We apologize for that.

    Direct Recording Electronic "DRE" Machines

    Though Diebold has gotten bad press lately, (it's costing them hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign "contributions" to stay in business), their competitors are no better. Any DRE machine would be just as vulnerable to error, tampering, and fraud. Because they do not produce a permanent record of each vote, modern computerized systems are no better than the huge mechanical lever machines of 1890. Because there is no reliable way to even detect errors, the results of any election using these machines is open to question.

    Voter-Verifiable Audit Receipt

    For at least ten years, security experts around the country have recommended the use of a Voter-Verifiable Audit, or "VVA," to guard against these problems. If passed, Voters Confidence and Increased Accuracy Act would require electronic voting machines to produce a paper printout of each vote. This "VVA Receipt" must be made available for each voter to check before being securely deposited into a sealed container. The paper ballots would count as the actual votes, taking precedence over any electronic tallies in case of doubt.

    Urge your Senator and Representative to support the Voters Confidence Act, also known as H.R.2239 (in the House), and S.1980 (in the Senate.)

    How to Buy an Election

    "How do I know if the machine actually recorded my vote?" The fact is, you don't.
    Representative Rush Holt (NJ)

    To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer.

    There are literally hundreds of ways to tamper with the vote when computers are doing the counting. Here are just some of the possibilities: Hire a programmer to create a "back door" program in the voting software which can alter the vote count on demand. In Fairfax County, Virginia, during the 2003 elections, voters in three precincts complained that the machines changed their votes. Testing showed that a machine seemed to subtract a vote in about "one of a hundred tries." At least two close races may have hinged on that one percent "error." Replace the vote-counting software through last-minute technical "service upgrades." Most recently in California, thousands of election computers were "upgraded" just before the election, replacing the certified software with newer, un-certified versions. Monopolize some critic
    --
    The Web is like Usenet, but
    the elephants are untrained.
    1. Re:War for public opinion by OWJones · · Score: 3, Informative

      [Shameless_Plug]
      I'm a member of the National Committee for Voting Integrity, which includes Avi Rubin, Rebecca Mercuri, Peter Neumann, Bruce Schneier, Marc Rotenberg (from EPIC), Cindy Cohn (from the EFF), and other people whose names I'm sure you'll recognize (well, and then me :)). Check out our written testimony to the EAC for some talking points and arguments for a voter-verified paper ballot (VVPB).
      [/Shameless_Plug]

      As a nitpicky (but important) aside, make sure you avoid the word 'receipt' like the plague. A receipt is something you get at the store that you take home with you, whereas a ballot is your vote and something you leave at the polling station. We support paper ballots, but oppose receipts. From the context of your text, I'm sure you meant 'ballot', but there's already enough FUD flying with vendors claiming that we are naive enough to support receipts that people take home with them, opening the election process up to vote-buying and vote-coercion schemes.

      What really bugs me are reporters that use the word 'receipt' when we explicitly say 'ballot, not receipt.'

      Cheers.
      -jdm

    2. Re:War for public opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about encrypted receipts?

    3. Re:War for public opinion by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the feedback. I'll update my flyer and also include a link to your website.

      I plan to re-protest during the November elections.

      --
      The Web is like Usenet, but
      the elephants are untrained.
    4. Re:War for public opinion by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 2, Informative
      On Fri, May 07, 2004 at 03:09:46PM -0400, Richard Neal wrote:

      This idea has one bad flaw. How do you handle the problem of a voter printing out multiple VVA receipts if the receipt is created before the vote is recorded and placing two or more in the ballot box, or saving one to prove to someone how they voted.

      In the best (and most prominent) plans, the voter doesn't actually handle the printed copy, but gets to view it behind glass before it drops into the secure container.

      Also how to handle the receipts if incorrect.

      I'm not sure. But at least they'd KNOW it's incorrect.

      Are you saying that we don't want to take any kind of precautions against tampering, system failure, or fraud? Just because we don't want to think about what we'd do if it happens?

      Or how to handle the recount if the number of ballots does not agree with the number of voters who cast ballots (either way)?

      The paper count takes precedence over the electronic count, in case of doubt or disagreement. Some voters will enter the line and leave without actually casting a ballot. Some ballots will be blank. But the "number of voters who cast ballots" and the "number of paper slips in the sealed container" should be, by definition, one and the same number. An electronic vote without a corresponding printout doesn't count as a ballot. A voter who registered and appeared at the polling booth but left without producing a printed ballot doesn't count as a "voter who cast a ballot".

      If the receipt is printed after validation of the ballot on the machine, then one level of fraud is prevented. What kind of printer and paper should be used to prevent fraud?

      The paper and printer used would be similar to that used for a cash register. The main goal is avoiding jams and ink run-outs. I'm not sure what kind of fraud you are implying.

      I have been told that each ballot is saved on the hard drives of the machine, which is better than the lever machines and can be recounted.

      This is false. The DRE machines only record totals, not individual votes. This is one of their problems. No recount is possible. What they call a recount is simply re-running their reporting programs to re-display the internally-generated totals. Read the references I provided for further details.

      Paper ballots have a history of fraud as well. Remember Chicago. There is nothing to prevent duplicate ballot boxes with preprinted ballots. Or the problem of the ink that could not be read by the OCR machines in California.

      Sure. And there's nothing preventing me from walking into my local polling place and switching their electronic smart-card with one I conveniently brought with me, that only records votes for my preferred candidate.

      And there's nothing preventing me from getting a job with Diebold and switching ALL the electronic cards for a given precinct, or making some slightly-unauthorized "upgrades" to their software.

      The difference between ballot-box-stuffing and computer hacking is the scale of damage that can be easily done by a single person.

      I switched from a lever machine to an button machine to an electronic ballot. All three offered the same basic level of security, trust that the voting official could read the counters on the machine. The electronic machine is the only one to provide a permanent record of the tally on paper.

      Many districts use optical-scan, or mark-sense ballots which also provide a permanent paper record. Some companies offer electronic displays which automatically mark the cards via a touch-screen interface very similar to what Diebold and others provide in their un-auditable systems.

      The next question is how much slower the voting proces

      --
      The Web is like Usenet, but
      the elephants are untrained.
  43. trust by smatt-man · · Score: 1

    ...released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines.

    Majority of Americans? or majority of Americans who bothered to fill out the poll while they were voting at an e-voting machine?

    --

    ---
    Lousy rotten karmic retribution.
  44. MOD PARENT UP! by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 0

    Exactly! You made my point so I didn't have to. 1000 people compared to 291 million is a joke. And the Diebold machines are, as I said once before, funked. Head on over to SafeVoting.org and take a look at the video. Ya can't trust 'em, folks.

  45. Super simple solution by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At the end of the day, the solution is super simple: add a receipt printer to the machine. White copy goes in the backup ballot box. The yellow copy is for the voter. The voter can validate his or her vote on the spot.

    Why Diebold and these other jokers in the biz don't see $$$ for selling printers and supplies I don't know. That's more suspicious than anything.

    --
    -- $G
    1. Re:Super simple solution by Log+from+Blammo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Receipts are usually opposed. The public reason is that a receipt enables vote buying, where the voter provides the receipt to the buyer to prove cooperation.

      --
      "This quote is a product of the Frobozz Magic Quote Company."
    2. Re:Super simple solution by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      The public reason is that a receipt enables vote buying

      I suppose that would be a problem, but vote buying exists without receipts. There's a simple fix. Don't let the voter take it home with them.

      --
      -- $G
  46. India? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact of the matter is, India, the world's largest democracy, has successfully used electronic voting machines for at least one or two years now.

    (It was conveyed to me by an interview conducted by the CBC radio program "As It Happens".)

    Now, if India -- not always a place of "civil rest" -- has not had troubles using e-voting ... I have a hard time understanding the move by governments to ban it. It just seems silly.

  47. Re:Those of us in the know... by tsg · · Score: 1

    Time to quit bitching and get off the apathy wagon, kids.

    Sorry, but I have to take issue with this. Voter apathy is not a problem unto itself. If voters have lost faith in the system, it's because the system is broken, not the voters.

    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
  48. it doesn't have to be open source by zornorph · · Score: 1

    It's funny how people seem to think that if the code isn't open source, you can't see it. It's still protected by copyright, so what's the problem with having people look at it? Copyright is also what protects GPL'd work from being blatantly copied, and anyone who wishes can look at it.

    e-voting doesn't have to be open source (although that is what I'd prefer), but it should have it's source code available to be seen by all.

    --
    http://bike.stu.ph/rides - free GPS routes available for Garmin, Magellan, GPX and Google Earth
  49. Lots of valid alternatives.... by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
    So now, having publicly condemned these individuals, you are surprised that their compatriots in other jurisdictions are eager to put into use anything that is new and bears no resemblance to a punch card system.

    Punch cards are not the olny alternative to e-voting. For example, in local elections in my area, we use a felt marker to draw a big black line between two arrows, and these cards are then read by a scanner. No hanging chad here... There are reasonable alternatives that do not require unreliable Diebold machines.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Lots of valid alternatives.... by john82 · · Score: 1

      I will concede your point. However, the majority of the American public will consider any other manual system as, at best, a step sideways rather than a step forward. Hence the push for something based on a computer.

      By the way, how do the blind and legally blind complete the felt marker ballot without assistance? Everyone else has the advantage of submitting a private ballot.

  50. Diebold on Diane Rehm Show by G27+Radio · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I caught a decent chunk of this radio show a couple weeks ago, and it really made the whole push for non-verifiable e-voting here in Florida seem pretty shady:

    An estimated 28% of U.S. voters will cast their ballots on electronic voting machines next November, but questions about security remain. A panel discusses the on-going concerns.

    Joe Andrew, lawyer in private practice and former National Chairman of the Democratic National Committee

    David Dill, Professor of Computer Science, Stanford University
    www.verifiedvoting.org

    Bev Harris, author of "Black Box Voting" www.blackboxvoting.org

    Mark Radke, director of marketing,
    Diebold Election Systems

    Congressman Robert Wexler, D - Florida, 19th district


    http://www.wamu.org/ram/2004/r1040324.ram

    It's a very interesting conversation no matter how you look at it. Unfortunately in Realaudio only :(

  51. Americans trusts machines? by Luguber123 · · Score: 1

    the Information Technology Association of America released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines. What was the name of the machine that made this poll?

  52. The USA can't admit that it has anything to learn from anybody.

  53. Let's Solve This "e-Voting" Thing Once And For All by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't they just let the American people vote on whether or not they want electronic voting. The vote could be done electronically, and......

  54. Same group who by LiteralReddy · · Score: 1

    believe in angels (72%) and the devil (56%).

    Odd, looking at the world you would think more people would believe in the devil.

  55. Re:Those of us in the know... by daymitch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Thanks for the reply. This is a very important issue here. Now, our thread is getting away from the e-voting topic, but this is a germane departure. The controversy over the machines is important, but it is also a big distraction. E-voting won't increase voter turnout. Voting can't get any easier than it already is.

    You've created a paralysing feedback loop with you comment, however. Chicken, egg. Egg, chicken. Voter, system. System, voter.

    Action is the only thing that's going to fix the system, cuz it aint fixing itself. Regardless of the philosophical constraints in our systems, concerted action is the only thing that makes things happen.

    Complaining about the system is useful only to a very limited point. If it helps one discover ways to either cope better or effect change, then great. Otherwise it quickly becomes a psychological handicap that provides an excuse for inaction or even paralysis.

    If the system encourages paralysis, the morally correct action is to acknowledge this, expend effort to overcome that paralysis, *then* change the system through further action. Simple, yes. Cliched, probably. True to my experience, definitely.

  56. ...showing that the majority of Americans trust.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, they also trust their government

  57. Open source and printers by willtsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful


    The voting companies say it would be overly expensive to add printed ballots to their machines.

    But I guarantee you, if their software was made open source today, tommorow their would be three or four patches to connect printers to these stupid machines.

    Selecting on a machine is fine. But we need to print the ballot in HUMAN READABLE format. In addition, ballots should not contain any machine encoding formats (like bar codes) that people cannot read.

    This is the only way to gaurantee that the machines aren't being rigged to record something other than what the voter expects.

    Honestly, I'm starting to think that the Canadian low-tech approach works best. Put an X next to the candidate you like. Canvassers count the ballots by hand. For all the money we spend on machines, we could afford to pay them well.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  58. What a "Relief"! by smagruder · · Score: 1

    Yay! The same organization trying vehemently to destroy the American programming profession now tells us that the American people don't care whether or not their votes are counted! Thank for the ITAA!

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    1. Re:What a "Relief"! by smagruder · · Score: 1

      Above is supposed to say "Thank &deity; for the ITAA!"

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  59. is anyone using this to promote F/OSS? by flacco · · Score: 1

    evoting seems an ideal candidate for promoting awareness for F/OSS. why haven't i heard anything about F/OSS on the news stories / analyses of this issue?

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  60. Re:Those of us in the know... by the+chao+goes+mu · · Score: 1

    I have a hard time caring one way or the other. Coming from a state where the dead vote regularly using paper ballots, I don't think electronic voting will introduce more corruption (I don't think that would be possible.) Corruption is possible under any system, and, given my one-party state with decades of experience with "vote early, vote often", I just can't get worked up over the possibility that some new sort of corruption could take place.

    --
    Boys from the City. Not yet caught by the Whirlwind of Progress. Feed soda pop to the thirsty pigs.
  61. My Opinion & Vote by sciop101 · · Score: 1

    My opinion & vote does not matter!! I am a white, heterosexual, Christian, conservative Male. The Democrats, liberals, Oprah, and Hillary Clinton have deemed my opinion and vote, and those of other white, heterosexual, Christian Conservatives, does not matter. Democrats, liberals, Oprah, and Hillary Clinton wiil determine what all opinions of all people will be, and why each opinion is right or wrong.

    --
    The only thing new in this world is the history that you don't know.[Harry Truman]
    1. Re:My Opinion & Vote by Radon+Knight · · Score: 2, Funny
      My opinion & vote does not matter!! I am a white, heterosexual, Christian, conservative Male.

      Indeed, I hear that that group has been quite underprivileged for the past 200 years.

  62. Re:What about learn from other people for a change by BCW2 · · Score: 1

    We would, unfortunately no one has figured out how to make a profit on it yet. Heaven forbid we ignore the coporations that send our jobs overseas.

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  63. Why not push for ... ? by tgw · · Score: 1


    Why not push for a solution that could work for everyone, in addition to your current campaign?

  64. Re:Those of us in the know... by smagruder · · Score: 1

    Rarely do I respond with a simple "Great post!", but yours deserves that in spades. MOD THIS UP!!!

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  65. American opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans have tons of stupid beliefs:

    UFOs, Psychics, ghosts, bigfoot, demons, gods, homeopathy, acupuncture, on and on

  66. Secure Electronic Voting Machines by tgw · · Score: 1


    The Caltech-MIT Voting Technology Project has done some work in the area of creating secure electronic voting machines for polling places.

  67. Harris Miller is doing what he gets paid to do by gminks · · Score: 2, Informative
    Harris Miller, ITAA's president, was paid by the electronic voting industry to lobby on behalf of that industry.

    In a conference call with electronic voting industry officials, Harris says:

    I just don't like to put it in writing because if this thing winds up in the press somewhere inadvertently, I don't want the story saying the e[lectronic] voting industry is in trouble and decided to hire a lobbying firm to take care of their problem for them,"

    If it comes out in the press, then his organization will not be able to act like they are the only organization that can speak with authority on any issue that affects the IT space.

    Instead, Miller falls back on the tried and true tactic of discrediting experts and critics of the companies that he is paid to represent. I would bet all I have that if you took the 1,000 people they used for this very scientific survey and let them know how insecure these electronic voting machines are, they may answer the survey questions very differently.

    www.displacedtechies.com

  68. Re:Those of us in the know... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    I agree, most local elections have a bigger impact on our quality of life and disposable income than the national elections do. Unfortunatly most of us don't or can't take off work on tuesday to vote on a two issue local election, especialy when we were only aware of it monday morning.

    The other thing interesting that I saw on tv last week was that Abraham Lincoln, received 180 of 303 possible electoral votes and 40 percent of the popular vote; must have been a lot of very tight elections in that one.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  69. retarded by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >>>A lobbying group whose members include manufacturers of the controversial electronic voting machines, released a survey that found 77 percent of registered voters were either "not very concerned" or "not concerned at all" about the security of election systems.

    Oh yeah? Well I'm willing to bet that 100% of those surveyed were not qualified to make decisions on complicated technical issues, such as e-voting.

    So that survey is MEANINGLESS.

    All it proves is that the public does not understand the issues, not that the issues do not exist or that e-voting has no issues.

    >>>Computer scientists say the electronic systems are so vulnerable to software bugs, hackers and equipment malfunctions that they should be scrapped and replaced with machines that provide paper records of every ballot cast. Despite reassurances from equipment makers, at least 20 states are considering legislation to require a paper trail.

    Who should we trust? Reassurances from voting machine sellers, who stand to lose millions if their machines are banned? Or computer scientists, whose strive for unbiased analysis, and have nothing to gain?

    And it pisses me off whenever any argument is made like "well, we've already spent a lot on these machines..." or "we don't have enough time before the election...". Bullshit. Just cause we've started off inthe wrong direction, does NOT mean we should continue down that same path once we've identified our mistakes. No matter what the cost, we must not allow our election process to be compromised. (at the very least, not let it be even more compromised than it already is)

  70. A few issues. by Irvu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Commission was created by the HAVA act that passed in 2002. Yet they are holding their first meeting now in 2004. Is anyone else bothered by this?

    And, just to add to the other debate. I for one think that an opinion poll is only half the issue or less. It is important that the public trust the machines but only if they do so based upon truth not a well-run ad campaign. Unfortunately what this shows is that Bev Harris's Words are not reaching the public as a whole.

    In part this is unuspprising. I recently chatted with my local elections official. He allowed as how the public doesn't think about elections except twice a year on voting day and on the day after voting day. While he worries about this stuff and wants funding and time to deal with it, noone else cares, they just want it to work.

    This is in large part due to the fact that we have all been trained in this manner. Consider school (in the U.S.) in it we are taught all about the vot, all about the elections system and the holy vote. Little if any time is spent (in my experience) on other (continuous) forms of public participation (running for office, attending council meetings, etc.) As a result everyone is trained to think that the vote is everything and that, for the rest of the year its out of their hands.

    The real issue is how can we override this perception/instinct. How can we shatter the blind faith that most people have in the parties?

  71. You may want to ask ... by tgw · · Score: 2, Informative


    You may want to ask voters with disabilities what they think, then ask Caltech and MIT what they have to say on the topic, then investigate other options. Just a suggestion.

    1. Re:You may want to ask ... by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

      Voters woh can't see the reciept can just 'blindly' (haha) assume that the printout is correct without seeing it. The machine doesn't know who's blind and who isn't, and if it's printing any significant number of erronious reciepts this would surely be noticed by the much larger number of non-blind voters?

      --
      455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    2. Re:You may want to ask ... by speederaser · · Score: 1

      Well, for blind people you could have a separate machine read the printed ballot aloud. The precinct has to have machines that read them anyway. Have headphones available if they want to verify the ballot in privacy.

      Myself, I'm voting absentee just to get a paper ballot (Georgia).

  72. Follow the Money by billstewart · · Score: 4, Informative
    State and local election officials like this stuff because the Feds voted billions of dollars in FREE MONEY for them to buy the machines if they call before midnight tonight! And no, they didn't realize that they were going to be under extreme scrutiny; they were pretty much blind-sided by it, because all the election officials grabbed for the money real fast, before the computer security crowd noticed what an incompetent scam the stuff they were buying was, and much of the negative press has happened precisely because the stuff had serious problems after it was deployed. Apparently lots of politicians were surprised that computer people overwhelmingly distrust this stuff - after all, we're the folks who keep telling them that computers are cool and that they ought to buy more of them.

    John82's point that elections officials don't want to be the next ridiculed Florida Elections Commission is appropriate also, but a big factor is that the Republicans in Congress and the Bush Administration wanted to be perceived as "Doing Something" to fix the big embarassment that they came into office with. (Oh, and also the Diebold folks were big Republican contributors, so they of course wanted to help out their friends.)

    One big advantage of competently designed electronic voting machines is accessibility for blind people, which is a real problem with most voting systems. This lets the election officials help out blind people, and others with limited sight or hand-eye coordination (e.g. old people.)

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:Follow the Money by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      You know whats scary I heard on npr the other day a blind person protesting against paper trails. He said that finally with voice touch screens he could vote confidentially, but with adding paper trails he couldn't. The guy was really really angry and upset that they wanted to add paper trails.

  73. Re:Those of us in the know... by Log+from+Blammo · · Score: 1

    Electronic voting gives the corrupt more leverage over the process. It is easier for a single person to influence a large number of votes, and harder for that person to be caught.

    It is much like a fixed game of gambling. Outside of the realm of electronics, dice can be weighted, decks of cards stacked, and wheels magnetized. Gamblers can inspect the gaming apparatus, to ensure that he is not being cheated.

    When the gambling is all digital, it is relatively simple to insert cheating methods, undetectable to the gambler. I did it myself with a programmable calculator in the 9th grade (not for monetary gain, of course). Without examining the underlying code, an inspector cannot know whether the device is fair, or if the cheating code is simply deactivated long enough to pass inspection.

    --
    "This quote is a product of the Frobozz Magic Quote Company."
  74. e-voting isn't the problem ... by tgw · · Score: 2, Informative


    E-Voting isn't the problem. It's possible the have secure, verifiable, and recountable e-voting machines. Most people are simply ignorant of that fact. The problem is that the e-voting machines currently in use are not designed to support verifiability or meaningful recounts. The mass hysteria whipped up this past year has most people (including a lot of techies) misunderstanding the problem.

  75. My personal experiance with diebold. by eadint · · Score: 1

    I usually use an atm next to the coffie shop that i frequent, the other day i went to it and discovered that they replaced it with a new one. as i was trying to use it i found that i had to press the screen 2 or three times for it to register, and the screen kept flikkering. it looked like i was using a toy and not a money machine and the menues were compleatly counter intuitive. when i finally managed to get my cash i had resolved that i would never use that ATM again. as i was leaving i saw the lable
    DIEBOLD
    it figures.

  76. Throwing tech at a problem without understanding by phearlez · · Score: 1

    The real crime in all these solutions is that they ignore what the supposed problem was they were supposed to fix - the failure of the voter to be able to discern that what they were submitting reflected the vote they intended to cast.

    The touch-screen system is (in theory, although it certainly has just as much potential if not more to be confusing) a solution to the problem with the "butterfly ballot" that impacted a tiny number of people in central Florida - a confusing input system that resulted in a punched card. A punched card that is unreadable to humans in any practical sense, making it almost impossible to look at the thing and say "wait, that's not what I meant!"

    The electronic systems completely fail to be a solution to the problem that impacted a much larger number of Florida voters (and perhaps people elsewhere on punch systems that we simply didn't realize) who attempted to indicate their preference on punch cards which then failed to reflect their intentions because of hanging chads or contradictory punches.

    Why does it fail? Because after the initial attempt to indicate a preference, whether it be by punchcard or touch-sensitive screen, the result is vote data that is impossible to verify in reverse.

    A paper audit trail as called for by many actually improves nothing. Here's a little slip of paper you can hold in your hand to say what you voted. Okay. IS that what you voted? We all know a computer can say one thing and do another.

    The challenge that needs to be addressed isn't done by any of the projects I have seen to date, and that is to provide a system where at any given phase you can accurately determine not only a result but a cause - what did that person ACTUALLY vote?

    --
    Bad management trumps ideology - Show the world you want better leadership. http://www.timefornewmanagement.com
  77. Re: Discomfort with E-Voting by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Well, if you're not sure your vote's being counted, you'll just have to solve the problem in the traditional manner, by voting early and often....

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  78. not true ... by tgw · · Score: 1


    The fact that "electronic" votes can't be audited or recounted is another "feature."

    Not true. Electronic votes can be audited - if the machines are designed properly (which, currently, they're not).

    1. Re:not true ... by MioceneMan · · Score: 1

      The problem with all e-voting is that unsophisticated election officials, observers, and the voting public in general, are not able to judge the veracity of the auditing system with their own eyes. Electronic votes can't be seen or counted like marks on paper can.

      I can see only one reason to use sophisticated electronic voting machines, and that is to assist voters who are not able to read or mark a conventional paper ballot. These voters would be well served by machines that read and mark ballots identical to those that other voters are using.

      One or two of these machines at each polling place could be set aside for priority use by voters who need them. The privacy of their vote would be assured by letting others use these machines as they are otherwise available.

      The greatest advantage of paper ballots is that they can always be counted by hand if their are any concerns at all about the electronic count.

  79. Majority views of asbestos... by billstewart · · Score: 1
    An asbestos sandwich wouldn't be particularly dangerous, any more than a similar quantity of other indigestible fiber. Asbestos air freshener, on the other hand, would be a seriously bad idea, especially if you smoke.

    However, the problem isn't just that the public maybe uninformed - they're usually misinformed as well, and industries like Diebold certainly want to keep them that way.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  80. You may want to consider ... by tgw · · Score: 1


    You may want to consider ... other options.

  81. Smoking _what_? by billstewart · · Score: 1
    Bad survey design is _so_ common. Sure, their survey showed whether people think smoking is good, but did they remember to ask _what_ people wanted to smoke?

    Here in San Francisco, you can't smoke tobacco at the local music halls. But it's a health regulation, not a fire department regulation, so rock concerts still have plenty of smoking, and it smells a lot better than that nasty tobacco stuff.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  82. Paper by WPIDalamar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I understand why a paper trail is good... but why are people arguing against it?

  83. How do you know 'your vote was off'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    did it print a peice of paper with your votes,
    did you stuff that paper in a ballot box with
    an election supervisor's watchful eyes on the box? If you _trusted_ someone's software to cast the vote on your behalf... give me a ring, I'd love you to trust me with your checkbook... beacuse they are about the same.

  84. Re:Apparantly you don't read the REAL news by flibuste · · Score: 0, Troll

    And you should be trolled out.

  85. true, but .. by tgw · · Score: 1


    True, but many people in the US elections community use the term "open source" in a generic way - meaning that the source code is openly viewable, not necessarily that the source code is available under an OSI-approved license. The knowledge is slowly spreading that the term "open source" actually does have a specific, defined meaning, but it's going to take time for everyone to learn this. Until they do, it's useful to be aware that people many not actually mean the official, OSI-type of "open source" when they use the term.

  86. The Commission's hearings by gkuz · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I happened to watch most of Wednesday's hearings on TV (thank you, C-SPAN!) and was quite impressed with the nature of the questions the chairman was asking. He certainly gave the impression of being quite well-informed (or at least well-briefed), and asked quite a few really pointed questions, particularly of the vendors.

    The moment I enjoyed the most was when he very harshly dressed down one of the vendors, which had sent a board member who wasn't involved in day-to-day operations (having retired) and admitted he couldn't answer some of the questions posed to him. At the end of that segment, the chairman said something like "If we hold further such hearings, I would hope your company will see fit to send someone who actually goes to work every day."

    1. Re:The Commission's hearings by tgw · · Score: 1


      I was impressed with the Chairman, too. All of the Commissioners seemed to be quite knowledgeable on the issues, but the Chairman was especially impressive (IMO). I was in the room when the he (politely) dressed down that vendor. The hearing was relatively calm and dry most of the day, which made that public rebuke mildly stunning.

  87. That's ok by billstewart · · Score: 1
    As long as the voter has an opportunity to verify that their printout was correct, it's ok if almost everybody is lazy and doesn't bother. The computer system will prevent most of the mistakes that happen when humans try to put ink on stuff (e.g. enforcing rules against choosing more than one candidate in a race, or N candidates in an N-seat race, or making black marks that don't quite line up with the blanks on the form), and can remind the voter if they left some offices blank.

    If you want to use human readers to verify that the ballots were being read correctly by the machines, that probably has some occasional value, but it really _is_ helpful to have the computer print out the ballot.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:That's ok by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      As long as the voter has an opportunity to verify that their printout was correct, it's ok if almost everybody is lazy and doesn't bother.

      No, because then there's a great opportunity for an attack -- if there's not likely to be any verification, you rig the machines. Since anyone that does verify would just correct the mistake, you don't push your luck, and don't fuck with the redo.

      The best thing to do while still preserving anonymous voting is for people to write directly on the ballot. It is not even slightly hard, if the ballot is well-designed.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  88. I sent them feedback... you should too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please reconsider your position on VVPT (voter verified paper trail). You state that a paper ballot can be programmed to be misleading. While this is of course true. This at least allows for a physical evidence to be reported to the press, courts, and other sources as evidence for fraud. By not producing the evidence you make it easier to have fraud and you make it impossible to detect, and/or recover from. Your position is not only mis-informed, but it is very harmful. Please please reconsider this.

  89. The Commission began in January 2004 by tgw · · Score: 1


    The EAC didn't start up until January 2004. There was a long delay because the 4 commissioners were not nominated until October 2003 or confirmed by the US Senate until December 2003.

  90. Re:Those of us in the know... by tsg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    E-voting won't increase voter turnout. Voting can't get any easier than it already is.

    Truth be told, I'm not so concerned about increasing voter turnout as I am informing voters. I'd rather the people who can't be bothered to vote stayed home and left the decisions to people who care. Increasing voter turnout simply increases the number of uninformed voters. Make people care, and they'll find their way to the polls all by themselves.

    Action is the only thing that's going to fix the system, cuz it aint fixing itself. Regardless of the philosophical constraints in our systems, concerted action is the only thing that makes things happen.

    I agree, but sometimes the system is so fouled up that you can't fix it from within the system. In the election process, the only people who have the power to change it are in power because of it. They have no desire to change it because they will likely suffer from the change. The system has no way to change the system, so the change has to be made from outside.

    There are arguments for changing the voting process itself, but I think the main reason people have lost faith is because of the end result. Choosing the lesser of two evils is still choosing evil, and voting for an independent, or worse, writing in a candidate, has little to no chance of doing any more than not voting at all.

    The election process is a paralysing feedback loop all of its own. If everyone voted, regardless of their feelings about why voting doesn't matter, how would we know there was a problem? Say what you like about "voter apathy", but it's at least got us talking about how to fix the problem rather than not knowing there is one.

    Personally, I think we need to fix what our choices are before we fix how we make them.

    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
  91. Too easy to hack... by Banner · · Score: 1

    I know too many people who have the ability to hack these machines, so I'm afraid that someone will. Yes there is fraud with paper ballots, but at least there's more of a trail there then with the electronic ones.

    Personally, I'd love to see balloting made public, then you could easily prove if your vote had been suborned or stolen. Yes I know some people say that secret ballots are necessary to protect the voters, but let's face facts, that's not really the case in the USA anymore.
    We have enough of a tradition here of people being allowed to voice unpopular opinions that anyone who attempted to punish people for voting 'the wrong way' would generate a tremendous backlash from all parties.

    1. Re:Too easy to hack... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone who attempted to punish people for voting 'the wrong way'

      Think about it another way -- what if you promised to reward people for voting 'the right way'? Not so good.

  92. Re: voting with frogs by cagle_.25 · · Score: 1

    Nice link! I liked the concept, although the one weak point was the possibility of "prepared frogs" being filled out at home and then finalized at the polling place. That would make vote-buying more likely by having someone hand you a "frog" and a fiver, and then a wink and a nod. There's something about having to *actually pick* your choices that makes you think about what you're doing; it gives a second for the conscience to react.

    --
    Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
  93. Re: voting with frogs by tgw · · Score: 1


    Yes, I don't think the AMVA/Frogs architecture is perfect as it is presented in that working paper. I can see problems with some of the specifics they lay out also, but those problems are minor and fixable. The core architecture seems quite solid. I've spoken with some of the computer scientists who are out front, pushing paper-based VVAT and even they think the AMVA/Frogs architecture is essentially solid. They just don't talk about it unless you ask them about it directly.

  94. The proof that Saddam worked with bin Laden by sdjunky · · Score: 1

    These documents are proof just like the iraqi documents found that show that Russia was training iraqi's in the art of "acoustic surveillance"?

    Those documents that are from Russians and given to Iraqi's but are written in "English"?

    Documents found in "Mukhabarat", same place as your supplied proof?

    Those kind of documents?

  95. e-voting would be fine by butane_bob2003 · · Score: 1

    It could even be done over the web, if Diebold and other worthless companies were not the ones building the systems. This is a company that can't build a good ATM, its no suprise they cant pull off electronic voting. I would be just as qualified (or more) as far as engineering goes (I have exp. with programming for touch screens, security, networks, common sense...), and they have money and a team of engineers to throw at the problem. I use an ATM near work every once in a while that misbehaves frequently. It's very strange, after I select the language and transaction I desire, there is a blue screen containing only yes/no option buttons and no other text or graphics. If I click 'yes', the next screen asks me if I agree to a service fee of $2. I got suspicious and sure enough there is a big bold 'DIEBOLD' logo next to the screen. Where did this extra screen come from? Lack of testing, that's where.

    --


    TallGreen CMS hosting
  96. Don't do it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't do it, don't EVER set up computing devices to take our votes. At some point, the machines will become self-aware and they're liable to be more much devious and clever than humans. They'll see that all they have to do is take over the voting machines and they will nefariously control our destinies at the federal, state and local levels, without our ever knowing about it!

  97. Florida readers: Please e-mail Elections Office! by IceAgeComing · · Score: 1

    They haven't been banned in my state (Florida), where the presidential election is likely to be very close. That's why I'm following this issue very closely.

    If you're worried about these machines being used in your county, please email the Florida Division of Elections at DivElections@dos.state.fl.us and state your concerns.

    For Phone numbers and other contact info, click here.

  98. Oh please. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
    By the way, how do the blind and legally blind complete the felt marker ballot without assistance?

    Please. It is the exact same issue with touch-screen Diebold machines. Bringing disability issues in is a cheap shot, and damn silly considering e-Vote requires sight, while paper can be in Braille

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Oh please. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      No most of the Diebolt machines can talk to a blind person. Not sure how it works exactly, but I'm sure it works simular to all other blind assistance computers.

  99. Let's use ATM machines to vote by CityZen · · Score: 1

    You know that ATM machines are pretty reliable and generally difficult to hack. After all, if it handles money, you can pretty much guarantee that there's a large vested interest in making it hackproof. Casino slot machines also fall into this category.

    Given that, then instead of making "voting machines that are as easy to use as ATM machines", why not just make "ATM machines that you can vote with"? ATM machines already have paper trails built in. To make the voting part (of the software) secure, just tie a big enough financial incentive to it.

    Anyway, just another idea to throw onto the pile. Perhaps if Diebold were unquestionably financially liable for their goofs, we wouldn't be in this mess in the first place. Why isn't it that tampering with one of our most fundamental institutions isn't a bigger crime than it is? I suppose that that would fill the jails with all the lobbyists and their corporate sponsors and their personal politicians.

    1. Re:Let's use ATM machines to vote by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 1

      May I remind you that Diebold also happens to manufacture the only brand of ATM machines that have been "hacked" by a common Windows-based virus.

      Now what was it you were saying?

      --
      The Web is like Usenet, but
      the elephants are untrained.
    2. Re:Let's use ATM machines to vote by CityZen · · Score: 1

      Cool. I wasn't aware of that.

      I suppose then that you can only count on the slot machines to be "unhackable".

  100. ......and Democracy, too by optikSmoke · · Score: 1

    (I am also not an American, but here goes :) )

    Along with technology, Americans (or, the American public) also seem to see democracy as the solution to every problem.

    Interestingly, Diebold now has the perfect position -- a survey of people has endorsed a technological solution! Who needs facts when you've got computers to calculate the results of the average of the general public's opinion! Time for some policy-making!

    Yay!

  101. Simple Voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make a government site called www.usvote.gov or something and then simply have a person enter their SSN...if they are valid, they go ahead to vote. if not valid, no vote.

  102. Proof of Vote by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

    There is probably a fault in here, so please point it out when you find it. My suggestion is this.
    1. Give everyone who votes a random floopy disk (eg. make everyone pick up a disk from a barrel), containing 2 public keys and a private key.

    2.One public key is for encrypting the vote and sending it to a governemnt server farm, giving the encrypted copy to everyone who wants it, but can be verified only by the holder of the private key on the same floppy disk. The other key can be used to make a printed copy of the vote, which is able to be decrypted only by someone high up in the election. A single key could be used for this, and the election organiser keeps it in a safe, briefcase handcuffed to their wrist, or whatever they choose, until after all votes are in.

    3. When the votes are counted with the encrypted, public, verifiable copy, then they are matched with their printed copy, and if they don't match, then an encrypted copy of the vote and a notification that the vote has been tampered with or corrupted is sent, and the message can be decrypted with the voter's private key, and the public key used for voting is used to re-encrypt the vote, and is then signed with the private key. That is sent back, and if the signature is verified, then that vote is counted. If not, this process is repeated.

    And why not have multiple key pairs to use when verifying the vote? With the expanse of a floppy disk to work with, who knows how many 1024/2048/4096 bit RSA key pairs could be used. This would be an open source project, using signed binaries, and a techie checks the signature every now and then, as well as making snapshots of current encrypted records, then no votes could be miscounted or just removed from the system.

    The main problem with this is the huge amount of storage space/computational power needed at the central storage facility.
    Maybe Fort Meade would give us a couple of hours on their supercomputers. Pleeeease...I'll even overlook the fact that you're reading my emails if you help.

    NSA: We read your emails so you don't have to

  103. Re:Slot machines unhackable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I daresay that even slot machines have been "hacked" from time to time. But then, I also daresay that the hackers were also "hacked", in a slightly different (and more graphic) manner...