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Computerized Election Results With No Election

_Sharp'r_ writes "In Honduras, according to breaking Catalan newspaper reports (translations available, USA Today mention), authorities have seized 45 computers containing certified election results for a constitutional election that never happened. The election had been scheduled for June 28, but on that day the president, Manuel Zelaya, was ousted. The 'certified' and detailed electronic records of the non-existent election show Zelaya's side having won overwhelmingly."

28 of 433 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Really by fastest+fascist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yea, because they totally couldn't have stuffed boxes full of fake paper ballots.

  2. And This Is the Government of a Country by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nobody's saying electronic records can't be faked through physical access to the machines. You're the only one who seems surprised at that, in order to deny it should be surprising. Which is a straw man argument.

    This story is important because it crossed the line from possible, to (evidently) actual. Which has consequences. Not the expected consequences of helping keep a president in power, but (even more notably) in helping to keep one ousted by a coup this past week out of power, boosting arguments of his corruption.

    Next you'll be sarcastically moaning "oh, noes, presidents are corrupt". FYI: Yes, and when they are, the people need to be outraged about it, and get rid of them.

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    make install -not war

    1. Re:And This Is the Government of a Country by Brickwall · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I don't know if the Honduran constitution has a mechanism to remove a sitting president from office

      They don't. See "hondurascrisis.org" for details from a Honduran.

      Wikipedia's article on the matter suggests that by even trying to hold the referendum, the constitution required that he was to be removed from office.

      Again, according to the link above, the constitution does say that trying to change the length of the President's term (currently 4 years) is treason. Zelaya was trying to change the rules to allow for his re-election. So, technically, he was committing treason.

      Now, for all those who call this a "coup", ask yourself what the Honduran authorities were supposed to do? You had a President committing treason, repeatedly ignoring the orders of the Supreme Court, and attempting to use the military to hold an illegal referendum. You don't have an impeachment process. Do you:

      1: Put him in jail in Honduras? Possible, but then he's in a place where his supporters know where he is, which could lead to a mass assault in an attempt to free him. If that happens, hundreds of people could die, and incite a civil war.

      2: Execute him. Obviously, a non-starter. It creates a martyr, and again the chance of civil war.

      3: Exile him. Clearly the wisest choice. Get him out of the country, and away from his supporters, try to let the situation cool down, and get the facts out. The fact that CNN, the BBC, etc. are staunchly suppressing these facts, and dressing this up as a military coup says more about their agenda than it does their believability as objective news organizations.

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      What was once true, is no longer so
    2. Re:And This Is the Government of a Country by Brickwall · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This isn't a case of "liberty"; this is a case of an elected official subject to term limits who was trying to subvert the constitution so he could extend his term, and although not proven, given his close friendship with Chavez, then declare himself "President for Life". I'm sure the originators of the document didn't include the provision that trying to change term limits for the President was treason on a whim.

      Far better, I agree, that Honduras amend their constitution to include an impeachment process. But seriously, isn't "high crimes and misdemeanours" pretty wide in itself?

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    3. Re:And This Is the Government of a Country by spiralpath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >1. Nazism, Fascism and Communism are all Evil. Right?

      You take three words with highly ambiguous (and very different) meanings, and you attempt to link them together using an extremely loaded word that only has relative meaning. This is where "complexity" comes into play. How would anyone even know if they agreed with you or not? Do you mean the actions of German Nazis in the Holocaust, Nazism as a political system, or people who label themselves Nazis? What is your understanding of Fascism? How can an economic structure (Communism) be "Evil"? Do you mean something else by it? What is Evil, not being defined relative to Good?

      This one sentence you uttered makes you sound like a parrot for the hegemony. You need to define your terms, otherwise your entire chain of arguments, which is built on this extremely vague first premise, comes apart under scrutiny. I won't even approach your other "rules."

    4. Re:And This Is the Government of a Country by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When the government can take anything away from you at any time, for any or no reason, that isn't liberty. It isn't freedom. There are no choices. That IS evil.

      By that definition everything short of Anarchy is evil.

      Parents as a form of governance over their children is evil and children should have free reign to do completely as they please.

      What is "yours" is only what is "yours" by government protection and social contract. There is nothing which says my TV is mine. It has no intrinsic ownership beyond what I can defend. As a member of society I get society's protection of what I can reasonably defend as mine. Without government what is mine is only what I can defend personally, pay someone to defend or threaten into defending.

      It's a strong government when can enforce contracts. It's a strong government which can keep the people from deciding that you've received an unfair portion of resources. It's a strong government which enables wealth.

      If you want complete freedom from government intervention then you also have to learn to live with the fact that there are is no definition of ownership.

      Evil is allowing those around you to suffer and die while others live in excess. Evil is manipulating a system in order to economically subjugate those without as much money through your influence.

      Communism is Evil. Capitalism is Evil. Socialism is Evil. Anarchy is Evil. Everything is evil. Some things are just more obviously evil. Nobody gets to take the high road.

      The United States supported Stalin. He killed more Jews than Hitler. Is the US evil? Nobody is blameless. To admit that isn't weakness it's reality.

    5. Re:And This Is the Government of a Country by Burz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know if the Honduran constitution has a mechanism to remove a sitting president from office, but it was pretty clear that he was absolutely on his own.

      "On his own" except for a large backing from the populace.

      I don't know if their constitution has an impeachment mechanism either, but I do know that any body of law that puts itself beyond even a supermajority vote is an anti-democratic tyranny.

  3. Re:So Impeach Him by I'm+just+joshin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's pretty much what they did according to their own constitution. Unfortunately the rest of the world is getting Chavez's spin on the matter. -J

  4. again, for the morons by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and the industry shills who have sold their conscience:

    you can screw with paper ballots. but a lot less easily and a lot less slower and with a lot more effort and a lot easier to trace than the effort required to mess with electronic voting

    simply for the sake of the integrity of democracy, electronic voting should NEVER happen, in ANY country

    do you really need any convincing about what can happen to a country if a vote is put in doubt considering recent events?

    not that iran used electronic voting, but imagine how much LESS forensic evidence there would be if iran ever lets anyone independently monitor the results

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:again, for the morons by MrMista_B · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But.... why?

      Paper ballots work better.

      Not everyone has access to a computer or internet connection.

      Paper ballots are cheaper.

      Paper ballots are harder to forge.

      Paper ballots /work now/, and work well.

    2. Re:again, for the morons by RichMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US has a crazy system where they have "embraced" democracy beyond that which is practical. They vote for far to much. They vote for the local sheriff and the local dog catcher. There are pages and pages of things to vote on the US voting system. It is beyond ridiculous to expect any significant percentage of voters to become aware of all the positions that are voted on.

      The US has embraced the idea of democracy but failed at the application due to an over application of the idea.
      Not quite as bad as the USSR and communism.

  5. Re:Really by Peaker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its far easier for a 3rd party overwatching election committee to verify that the box is empty before the election, than to verify that the electronic election is actually reset, and the machines aren't tampered, and have no back doors, and so forth.

  6. Re:So Impeach Him by FlyingSquidStudios · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Good luck taking the government by force with your handguns versus their stealth bombers.

  7. Re:Really by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You may not have noticed this, but paper ballots are ... made of paper. And lots of ballots take up lots of space. They're heavy. They have to be disposed of. This takes time. People notice. There are witnesses. The amount of effort involved in altering or covering up the results of a fully computerized election is so much less than the amount of effort involved in altering or covering up the results of an election that uses paper ballots that the two aren't really comparable.

    Of course paper ballots are no guarantee of an honest election. Nor is there any guarantee that locking your door will keep your house from being broken into. But an all-electronic election is like leaving your front door hanging wide open and putting a sign in your yard that says, "Come take stuff."

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    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  8. Re:So Impeach Him by RabidMoose · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which is why it becomes so very important for a would-be revolution to have the support of stealth bomber pilots.

  9. Re:So Impeach Him by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They did impeach him. Their Congress and Supreme Court both voted to oust him. Further their constitution says that if a President tries to extend his term (which is what he did) he immediately stops being President.

    You're right about the pajamas thing. They should have shot him and saved themselves the trouble.

  10. If true by zogger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They avoided more serious bloodshed the way they did it. If this is a true fact, and he had remained "in power", he would have beern still able to order around a lot of the military forces who were loyal to him, plus cause mass demonstrations, etc and be able to coordinate it better. Because there is no way he would have gone along with getting impeached.

    Even on the surface it was a blatant power grab by him, the entire issue was designed to turn him into el presidente for life. The congress there and the judges ALREADY had told him this wasn't proper nor legal, but he was going aherad with this "vote" scam regardless. So what makes you think he would have gone along with an impeachment? They were under the gun of making a time critical decision, and didn't off the guy or anything, just got him out before the situation got worse. If they hadn't already warned him about it that would be different, but they did warn him before the fact.

    Ya, two sucky choices, but I think they chose the lesser of two suckages there.

    But all of this is based on "if" and we just don't know the veracity of this latest revelation, but we do know about the power grab he was attempting, sort of like chavez making himself the president (basically and practically)for life "legally".

    Term limits are a dang spiffy idea when it comes to politicians, no matter how popular they are, and changing the rules, like he wanted to do with this plebiscite, at the last second, is a serious mistake and transparently was just an effort to accrue more power under some umbrella of it legally happening. The people there had a right wing dictatorship like forever, and a lot of them could plainly see a left wing version now happening, and they just went "no you don't!".

    That's how I have read these ongoing events anyway.

  11. Re:Really by MacTO · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The main benefit of paper ballots are the many eyes and hands that the ballots and ballot boxes go through.

    Think of it this way: the trademark images of the Iraqi elections a few years back were the inked thumb and the translucent ballot box. Neither are inherently secure, but the inked thumb made it more difficult for people to vote early and vote often without the risk of someone noticing it. Likewise, the translucent ballot boxes made it more difficult for the bins to be stuffed before hand without the risk of someone noticing it. Computers are so incredibly opaque that it is nearly impossible for someone to notice discreprancies without direct and intensive observations as well as a great deal of technical knowledge.

    Now we all know that elections are fixed, even with pen and paper ballots. It is possible to pay off the right people so that they conveniently don't notice anything. Almost everyone else can be intimidated into not noticing anything. But, either way, more people will notice the discreprancies and people tend to have long memories about such things. So there is still a potential for them to remedy it.

  12. Elections should be seen as fair by TheLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Elections don't just have to be fair, they have to be seen as fair (or at least fair enough). Otherwise they increase the odds of massive riots even if the result was correct.

    Electronic voting systems are still opaque to the average person even if they happen to be fair.

    In contrast when paper voting is done properly, the various parties can have their representatives observe the whole process of the voting, storage and counting. This is in fact done in many countries. It is not some "theory".

    In "notorious" countries typically the "counting" is done behind closed doors, or observers aren't allowed to keep an eye over the ballot boxes. The more a country/gov hides the whole process, the more suspicious it will seem.

    With electronic voting systems the counting is effectively done behind closed doors. And if you set things up so that independent and party representatives can observe the counting, the system ends up about as slow as paper voting, just more complex and expensive.

    Electronic voting systems are only useful for the wrong reasons.

    I have to admit that paper based voting fails if too many of the citizens in your country can't count properly. But by that time you probably have an idiocracy anyway.

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  13. And it was a good rationale... by raehl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...when the populace was armed with muskets, and the government was armed with muskets.

    Now the populace is armed with, at best, assault rifles, and the government is armed with tanks.

    What really keeps the government in check is the right to join the military.

  14. Re:Really by MooUK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is it? Why?

    If I'm capable of rigging an election electronically, I could be capable of covering my tracks.

  15. THERE WAS NO COUP! by raehl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The congress and the supreme court tossed him from office when he violated the constitution. The Army just fulfilled their constitutional duty.

    It would be no different than the US Senate convicting a President at trial, and the President refusing to leave office. At that point what the rest of the government is supposed to do is toss him, forcefully, if need be, although in the US it would probably be the Secret Service that did it.

  16. Re:Really by TheLink · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh, to rig a paper election you will have to hide something. The more hiding you do the more suspicious it is. The more open the process is, the harder it is to cheat. With people watching each step e.g. checking that the boxes are empty, observing the voting, the storing and opening of the boxes, and the counting, it gets very hard to cheat on a massive enough scale.

    Go see how paper voting is done in various countries and you can see it's really hard to rig in some countries, and easier in other countries (ballot boxes are moved, counting is done in secret by one organization).

    Sure you can bribe people. But if so many are bribable, the country is screwed up so badly it hardly matters what system you use.

    In contrast an electronic election is mostly _hidden_ to observers. So it should be suspicious by default.

    If you set it up so that people can observe the storage and counting of the electronic votes, it's going to be as slow as paper voting, but more expensive and complicated.

    The easiest way you can rig paper elections that are done openly and properly is with postal votes. However electronic voting systems are just as vulnerable to this problem - if not more so.

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  17. Propaganda Yourself by Ironsides · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a military coup unofficially supported by the US,

    US manufactured, voting machines

    Interesting how you state two things here with no proof. Nor are either of these in any of the articles and the only one who has said it was "unofficially supported by the US" has been Hugo Chavez. Further, US President Obama has condemned the coup. Oh, and it didn't say that they were voting machines, either.

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  18. No to eVoting and Digital Democracy by jmorris42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > eVoting CAN and WILL happen.

    It may come, but it will come over my cold dead body.

    > ..every voter must have its own private key... [lots of useless tech details clipped]

    The problem is with the tech. You, me and at least 10% of the nerds here on Slashdot could design an evoting system that would be technically perfect. And still spell the final death of our Republic because of the non-technical flaws that can't be fixed with tech.

    Problem one. Take away the secret ballot (i.e. the voting booth) and it is 100% certain that vote buying, voter intimidation and many other evils will follow. No ballot cast over the Internet can be proven to be secret. Note that this defect exists with absentee and general mail in balloting as well. Mailed in absentee ballots generally don't decide elections and can be accepted as a compromise. General mail in elections are inherently corrupt.

    Problem two. You will never design an electronic system that is 100% proof against fraud. It is doubtful one can be designed as resistant to fraud as paper ballot counted in the open with observers from all camps present.

    > Voting could then be extended to government actions that currently skip the peoples' opinion.

    You are describing Democracy. And the Founders were aware of this system of government and rightly rejected it as proven by history to be madness. We were instead given a Constitutional Republic. I have seen nothing to indicate the current government educated masses possess such an advanced level of civic virtue as to justify a reevaluation of their verdict on the subject.

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  19. Re:Opposition Faked it to ciminalize him by hawk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The election was rigged per se.

    Merely *holding* the election was illegal and in violation of the law. This was settled by law, and in courts.

    This was not a "coup" by the lawful government, but rather the lawful government thwarting a coup by the president . . .

    hawk

  20. The significance of this for the rest of the world by goombah99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One should of course take such breaking news reports with a grain of salt till confirmed, one could imagine this being some sort of misinterpretation of the observations (e.g. maybe those were early voting ballots??), Moreover this is hondouras.....as I'm sure other posters will talk about.

    IN any case assuming the report is correct, it's critical contextual significance is thus:

    One of the big strawmen often raised by folks in favor of electronic voting is that there is this supposed panacea called "parallel testing" that is touted as being an invincible process of detecting rigged machines. The idea is that at random a machine will be chosen before the elections begin and pulled out of service, then the election workers will cast pretend votes on it all day long. then it's output checked for accuracy. This is called "parallel" testing because it's done in a time period parallel to a real election, supposedly to "fool" any date dependent software. It's not an awful idea and would indeed detect some kinds of naive electronic fraud. But the idea that this is remotely a solution is even more naive.

    Moreover, said proponents don't actually ever do this--- it's just a thought experiment. The real reason for that strawman argument is not that people would actually would do it, it's that since you could in principle do it, this keeps that bad guys at bay. Ha Ha Ha.

    So it's such a terrible irony then that the very first time in history that, effectively a different kind of parallel test did occur, that yep massive machine rigging is found!

    the parallel test in this case is: call an election. cancel it unexpectedly at the last possible second and impound the machines, test them for rigging.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
  21. Not really true. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... peculiarly, the Honduran Constitution does not include an impeachment procedure

    But it does specify that anyone who advocates or takes steps to modify the portion of the constitution immediately loses any government office he holds and is banned from holding a government office for ten years.

    This is what Zelaya did. The head of his party called for his ouster and the Supreme Court ruled that he was in violation of this section and no longer the President.

    Even if the steps weren't explicitly laid out in advance this sounds like a constitutional impeachment procedure to me.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way