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Sequoia Disclosing Voting System Source To DC

buzzinglikeafridge writes "After Sequoia voting machines registered more votes than there were voters in DC's primaries last September, and the city threatened a lawsuit as a result, the company agreed to disclose technical details of the system (including source code) to the city. Although this isn't the first time the company has disclosed the source code of its machines, it is the first time the machines' blueprints will be handed over as well."

3 of 100 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What's so complicated? by S77IM · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's close enough for government work.

    --
    Student: Is it true that the foundation of the universe is paradox?
    Master: Well, yes and no.
  2. Should get the same attention as fighter planes by CFD339 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The machines that protect democracy include jet fighters, naval warcraft, guns, rockets, bombs ---- and voting machines.

    The US Government wouldn't buy a any of those other things without a massive effort to make sure they were secure, why not voting machines as well? If you can compromise those, the rest are easy.

    --
    The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
  3. Re:Why a secret ballot? by Devout_IPUite · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, I am sure that secret ballots are essential. Not only can an open ballot leave you open to retaliation (an extremist group says "Anyone who votes for Candidate X is going to be on our hit list") but it also lets them buy votes a la "$50 for anyone who votes for Candidate Y" (by the way, at $50 for each voter takes about $3.5 billion if you want the same popular vote that Obama got last year. Obama spent around $0.6 billion, think any corporations would be willing to fund a candidate?)