Diebold Disks May Have Been For Testers
opencity writes "The Washington Post reports on the two Diebold source disks that were anonymously sent to a Maryland election official this past week. Further investigation has lead individuals involved to believe the disks came from a security check demanded by the Maryland legislature sometime in 2003." From the article: "Critics of electronic voting said the most recent incident in Maryland casts doubt on Lamone's claim that Maryland has the nation's most secure voting system. "There now may be numerous copies of the Diebold software floating around in unauthorized hands," said Linda Schade, co-founder of TrueVoteMD, which has pressed for a system that provides a verifiable paper record of each vote."
I was one of the RABA testers. We discussed this today and we returned the disks to the testers. The leaks came from Linda Lamone's OWN OFFICE!
The tagging system is a joke. 90% of all tags are either words in the article title, or one or more of "fud, notfud, yes, no, maybe."
there is no need to sign your posts. this isn't usenet. your username is right there above your post. stop it.
Back in 2004 computer programmer Clint Curtis testified under oath that he had been asked by a congressman to write software that would make it possible to rig elections. He quite blandly states that "anyone" (with the expertise) could write software to rig elections, because the system has not been secured in any way.
And when you gaze long enough into the code, the code will also gaze into you.
I just wasted mod points for no reason at all.
What's the point again?
The Baltimore sun says that "Kagan called the attorney general's office, and word of the disks began to spread. Learning of the development, Linda H. Lamone, the state's elections chief, reported Kagan's possession of the code to the FBI yesterday [Oct 19]."
Which only reinforces my point, since
Attorney General > State Election Chief
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
(To mod: Troll? WTF?)
/. articles all get a bit smelly after a few days.
I agree - I don't have tons of time to surf anymore and I steal a glance at the tags before considering whether to actually RFTA or not. I can't imagine myself using the search function for anything in particular, as fish, relatives and
Yes, tags are the greasy new flavor feature, but if it's strictly for indexing, searching, whatever, why bother showing them on the front page? We as the users will abuse anything given a chance...err I mean use as we see fit.
This comment does not necessarily represent the views and opinions of the author.
Ordinarily, I'd agree, but this is a company whose CEO at the time said on the record that he is "commited to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president". He did exactly as promised, looks like. Open partisan bias like this makes me more inclined to believe that malice was involved.
Qu'on me donne six lignes écrites de la main du plus honnête homme, j'y trouverai de quoi le faire pendre.
They slapped the company name on it after they bought it. That says "We stake our reputation on this product."
Or at least, that's what it says to me.
Or, looked at another way, they thought the product was good enough to buy and put their name on.
I'd say that makes it related.
This is the same reason (you knew I couldn't hold the rant in, didn't you?) that I want to boycott *all* Sony products after seeing/hearing what Sony BMG did with root kits on audio CDs (and some other things in their consumer electronics lines, yes, I'm talking about DRM in BD). They said "We put our company name behind this product, and you can judge our company by this product."
Well, they did, and I did.
As to the "malice in design" specifically... have you looked at the software people that coded the voting machines? As of a few years ago, a bunch of them had convictions for fun crimes like computer fraud... just the sort of people *I* want coding my voting machine. Check the wiki entry for them.
This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?