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ES&S To Buy Diebold, Blackbox Voting To Sue

Gottesser writes "Long-time election rights activist Bev Harris (she had an HBO special a while back where she hired Hari Hursti to hack an optical scan voting machine) just sent this out: 'Diebold/Premier Election Systems is being purchased by Election Systems & Software (ES&S). According to a Black Box Voting source within the companies, there will be a conference call among key people at the companies within the next couple hours. An ES&S/Diebold-Premier acquisition would consolidate most US voting under one privately held manufacturer. And it's not just the concealed vote-counting; these companies now also produce polling place check-in software (electronic pollbooks), voter registration software, and vote-by-mail authentication software.' Our voting system is heading toward a server-centric model with our vote being delivered to us by computers under lock and key far away from public oversight. Here's ES&S's press release. Wikipedia's got something on the ongoing string of ES&S controversies as well."

5 of 175 comments (clear)

  1. Electronic "voting" needs to die by rsborg · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This is the most precious part of our democracy and we're going to let one company lose people's votes down the memory hole?

    This should force the FEC to outright ban electronic voting. I guess my .sig is getting old by now.

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    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  2. What else is left? by bughunter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And it's not just the concealed vote-counting; these companies now also produce polling place check-in software (electronic pollbooks), voter registration software, and vote-by-mail authentication software.

    All the ingredients necessary and sufficient to engineer an election result undetectably and without pesky statistical red flags. George Orwell himself couldn't have designed a more riggable system.

    Say goodbye to democracy.

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    I can see the fnords!
  3. Re:Paper ballots by ngg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I personally don't care if people know how I vote and I think I should have the option of it being public.

    However, *I* do personally care if people know how you voted because it makes it far easier for someone to pay and/or intimidate you to vote a certain way.

  4. Congress passes "God-Bless-America-Bill" by jeko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Washington DC
    October 1, 2009

    In a stunning display of bipartanship today, Congress saved the taxpayers several million dollars by suspending all future elections. Proponents of the bill point out that most people didn't even bother to vote last time, and that of those who did, polls show the overwhelming majority of them held strong opinions about issues they didn't even begin to understand.

    "It was a ridiculous waste of the taxpayer's money," said Sam Rickenbaugh of the GAO. "We'd spend millions, billions even on holding elections, and the voters who even bothered to show up were the same mouth-breathing idiots who get roped into jury duty. It was a pathetic display, embarrassing even."

    Democrats and Republicans have agreed to share power across the aisle, and points of contention will now be decided based on who can gather the largest contributions for their side.

    "Now this is Democracy," posts John Ringerton of My Country Right Or Wrong.com. "You got an opinion, you can put your money where your mouth is like God intended."

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    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  5. Re:Doesn't matter now. by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So, you have evidence that Democrats, as a group, are any less concerned about the inherent dangers of all-electronic voting systems than the population as a whole?

    I'm a Democrat. I voted for Obama. I'm glad he's President. (Or rather, I'm glad McCain isn't President; not quite the same thing, but it's what we've got.) And now that we have a Democrat in the White House, I think it is exactly as important that we have a trustworthy election process as it was when had a Republican. I don't want anyone rigging elections, in favor of any candidate of any party.

    No matter how bad things get, as long as we have honest elections, we have a chance to fix them. If we lose that ... forget it, it's over. Democrat, Republican, black, white, whatever: if the people in charge have the means to ensure they stay in charge regardless of the will of the people, they will use that power, and we are permanently screwed.

    In short, AC, don't assume everyone else shares your level of asshole cynicism. There are a lot of us who still care about the future of our country.

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    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.