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NY Legislature Rejects "Microsoft Amendment"

An anonymous reader writes "Finally, some good news on electronic voting. The New York state legislature rejected an amendment proposed by Microsoft's lobbyists which would have gutted New York's requirements for voting machine vendors to turn over their source code to the state Board of Elections. Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton commented: 'The voting machine vendors have known for two years what our laws said. Now they're saying that those parts of their systems using Microsoft software have to be proprietary? It's just wrong.'"

3 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. Re:no its not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The solution is to create a system where you don't have to trust the source code to begin with

    Touchscreen, vote, hit done, the machine prints a paper ballot. You review said ballot and deposit the paper ballot in the ballot box.

    What could be simpler and less prone to manipulation or error?

    In that scenario, you don't have to know jack shit about the voting machine or its source code. It doesn't matter. The voter reviews the output, not the internals. If people start noticing that a certain machine or certain brand of machines prints incorrect ballots frequently, well then steps can be taken to figure out why.

    But the end to end system can't be gamed.

    There is no level of code review or "trusted computing platform" specification that will provide anywhere NEAR that level of trust and confidence in the system. Add to that the fact that you have an incontrovertible source of paper ballots for recounts, what more does anyone want? why do we put up with anything less?

  2. Re:Nothing to see here. Move along. by Vulva+R.+Thompson,+P · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I click on them all the time.

    It's a deliciously satisfying way of transferring cold hard cash from Microsoft's wallet to Slashdot and Google.

  3. Re:Glad to see NYS grew a pair... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm no fan of MS in any way, shape or form, but I can completely understand their reluctance to hand over their source code. In this day and age there is a good chance that it would be leaked faster than you can say BitTorrent.

    If the price of admission into the eVoting game is handing over their source code then they made a wise business decision. It's far too small of a market for MS to chance exposing Windows source (and all the security breaches that would soon follow). In the big picture of things, MS made the right decision. That aside, they still suck for trying to sneak that amendment in.