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NIST Wants To Hear Your Ideas On Election Equipment

Joseph_Daniel_Zukige writes "I'm still trying to figure out who is doing what here. It looks like the typical bureaucratic mess, but it looks like NIST, operating under the Help America Vote Act has set up a Technical Guidelines Development Committee to advise the 'independent bipartisan' United States Election Assistance Commission. So, the TGDC is going to hold some public hearings, and they've invited members of the public to help them out: 'One hour will be reserved at the conclusion of each day for members of the public to provide up to five minutes of testimony.'" Read more below, including how to register (today is the deadline) for the meetings, which will take place in central Maryland later this month. Update: 09/15 18:04 GMT by T : Irvu writes "You can submit online comments to NIST's Technical Guidelines process. The link is here. Just click on the link marked 'Submit Comments or Position Statements.' Alternately you can e-mail your comments to vote@nist.gov."

Joseph_Daniel_Zukige continues "I can't make it. (Very long drive across a very deep ocean, or plane tickets I can't afford.) Twelve people per session is not going to allow a lot of people to testify. I'm sure Microsoft has someone going to sell a MSWxx based voting machine. I hope somebody from the EFF is going. Think it would be possible to pack this thing with enough Slashdot geeks to convince the government at least that electronic voting absolutely requires a human-readable ballot to be produced?" The meetings are taking place on the 20th through 22nd of this month; you have only until 5 p.m. today to register, though. From the linked PDF: "The meetings will be held at the National Institute of Standards and Technology North Campus, 820 West Diamond Avenue, Room 152, Gaithersburg, MD."

1 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. Politics v. YRO by Kalak · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If this was under a YRO section, and not Politics, I'd almost guarantee that there would me more than 30+ commnets by now, and a larger readership. That readership could then effectively be mobolized to comment to the board. Weren't voting machines under YRO and not Politics? Judging by the number of comments, the number of readers has probably dropped too. While YRO and Politics are intertwined, if something was under YRO it should probably be left there, as people know where to find it.

    Slashdotting the politicians is not bad. Live appearnces, followed by letters and phone calls, e-mail last in effectiveness, but for some it's better than what we can do. I know I won't have the chance to be one of the 12 for a given day, and would defer to someone who speaks better than I do anyway.

    --
    I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by .hack)