The State of Electronic Voting in Georgia 231
An anonymous reader writes "The AJC is reporting on the current state of electronic voting in Georgia. The article discusses both sides of the debate and mentions Bev Harris and her work at Black Box Voting. Is touch screen voting the best solution available or is a conspiracy afoot?"
It's clearly a conspiracy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's clearly a conspiracy (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell me this, 2 identical counties, in 2 different states. Both with records of voting unanimously democratic for a number of decades, all of a sudden one votes unanimously republican. The difference? The voting machines. When you trace back the money, the republicans have themselves knee deep in the whole mess. The democrats aren't much better.
Paranoia is one thing, Mr Funny, the scientific process is another. What I think is that our representitives have forgotten one thing; they're here to serve us, they are here for us, not for themselves. This is a republic of the people and for the people, and while many are asleep at the wheel so to speak, americans aren't dumb, just slow to anger. Everyone speaks of our political times as "interesting", in the tense of how a bull fighter with a
Sometimes I think a constitutional amendment stating that all voting mechanisms must be open to all to see, a paper ballot alternative must be available and counted, a paper reciept must be issued with every vote, and if 5% or 10% of the people want a recount or revote (via signed petition), one happens would be a good idea. But I understand it's our responsability to stop these freaks of nature from destroying our republic.
There's a lot of damned fine red blood on those red stripes, gallons of sweat on the white stripes, and billions of tears for stars with a dark backround on the American flag. I'd die before I'd let tyrrany be instituted in this country.
Coincidentally (Score:5, Interesting)
here [bbc.co.uk]
Some profs doubt the reliability of the proposed voting equipment (!)
regd privacy etc (Score:5, Informative)
There are many on slashdot who won't even register for nyt. Just read this and it will make you privacy panaroids cringe.
"This is a complicated business. Each party's databank has the name of every one of the 168 million or so registered voters in the country, cross-indexed with phone numbers, addresses, voting history, income range and so on -- up to as many as several hundred points of data on each voter. The information has been acquired from state voter-registration rolls, census reports, consumer data-mining companies and direct marketing vendors. The parties have also amassed detailed information about the political and social beliefs that you might have shared with canvassers who have phoned or knocked on the door over the past few years. While specifics vary, a typical voter profile like my own, for instance, would show my age, address, phone numbers; which elections I've voted in over the past 10 or 15 years and whether I've ever voted on an absentee ballot; and my e-mail address. It would include my New Jersey party registration (Democrat), whether I've ever made a political donation (none that I recall), my approximate income, my ethnicity, my marital status and the number of children living in my house. Thanks to the ready availability of subscriber lists, mortgage data and product warranty information, the parties might use records of the newspapers I read (this one), the computer I work on (a Macintosh), the men's-wear catalogs I receive (Brooks Brothers, Land's End) and the loan-to-value ratio of my home."
And you guys spew vitriol over website registrations? That's the least of your worries...
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Coincidentally (Score:2)
It doesn't matter how many Bush cronies are at the top pulling the strings. From what I've read of the security measures in these machines, all it'll take is one or two pie-eyed commie mutant traitor sc
Touchscreens can be useful (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Touchscreens can be useful (Score:3, Interesting)
If there is any question / call for a recount, the recount is done by the VERY CLEAR and very EASY TO READ paper trail.
How hard is that?
PS - The software should be open sourced for peer review.
Valid suggestions for IRL's e-voting (Score:3, Interesting)
The suggestions made by the parent poster, re: a paper audit trail/receipts is exactly what the opposition political parties and campaigners are asking for. It's essential for an e-voting system. Not only can you manually count from actual ballot boxes in case of close result, suspiscion of tampering or
Re:Touchscreens can be useful (Score:4, Interesting)
"whupps, oh no what did i touch, "are you sure" *read with finger* ah, no, thats not what i meant, wheres the nearest country kitchen buffet?"
Re: (Score:2)
Why electronic voting? (Score:5, Insightful)
Many of the statements sound similar to the first comments about office automation. Computing was introduced into the office "just because", without a lot of thought going into which procedures should be automated vs. eliminated entirely vs. left alone.
A paper ballot (be it punch card, pencil fill in, or what have you) can't crash, is a permanent record (yeah yeah, they can be destroyed, but so can anything made up of atoms. I'll drop a stack of paper from 5' and you drop a touch screen from 5', we'll see which one survives), and can't be easily intercepted or altered without evidence of tampering.
What problem are electronic voting advocates trying to solve?
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:3, Interesting)
The two advantages of e-Voting that I can see are: votes can be counted more quickly and e-voting systems don't involve humans at the counting stage so in a perfect system errors can't be introduced deliberately or accidently.
The first advantage is pretty irrelevant, as I think most of us can wait overnight for something as important as democratic elections to be counted properly. And as for the second one, we all know that a perfect system doesn't and never will exist. Also, so many people are involved i
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:5, Interesting)
That is the great misconception that the pro voting machine crowd would like the public to think. But who programmed and designed them, GOD? Humans are in the process still. It is just that there efforts are more closely hidden then ever before. Any kind of mechanical counting is BY DESIGN an effort to hide vote counting from the public. It is a deliberate effort to rig the vote(or at least put the mechanism in place to easily rig it.) Even now in most states votes are not counted in public view but at the court house and anybody can tamper with the ballot box(or even outright replace it) before it reaches the court house to be counted.
Most people would be unable to check the accuracy of the programming and thus could be fooled into thinking the vote is safe. I'm not a programmer so I would have to rely on others to check on the vote and there are only so many programmers. Also would they allow me to spot check on demand? How do I know that the machine I'm using is running the same program as what was certified. If sheriff deputies can play musical ballot boxes on election day what is stopping them from playing musical hard drives or ROM chips?
Sorry give me human counters that count paper ballots AT THE POLL. Otherwise why bother to vote?
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree with what you're saying, But I was talking about a perfect system (i.e. it has been programmed correctly, and hasn't be tampered with). I am aware that humans are still involved in the process when e-voting is used.
Fortunately, I live in Britain were people still trust the pencil and paper, cross in a box approach to voting
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:5, Informative)
Ok, I'll grant those as two advantages. So why not have machine-readable paper ballots? We used them in the Toronto municipal election. Fill in the bubble for your candidate (with a Sharpie), feed into the optical scanner and watch your ballot drop into the big, transparent plexiglass box behind it. You get all of the advantages of the touch screen machines, and all of the auditability and trust of paper.
This one REALLY seems like a no-brainer.
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:2)
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:3, Funny)
Blind people, better faster cheaper? (Score:5, Interesting)
Q: So why do people want electronic voting? What are the perceived benefits?
A: Electronic voting is largely popular because of the perception that it will fix problems like those experienced in Florida in the 2000 presidential election. The Help America Vote Act made tons and tons of federal money available for voting technology, and companies like Diebold rushed into production with shoddy products in order to capture marketshare.
Of course, the irony is that with paperless (read: un-auditable) machines, there is both an increased risk of vote-counting problems (as the Diebold e-mail archive demonstrates) and NO MECHANISM to recount the votes. In other words, if another Florida happens, we'll basically just have to flip a coin.
One of the most important arguments in favor of electronic voting machines is that they will enable the disabled to vote unassisted. For instance, DRE's can tell blind people the options through headphones. This is a noble goal, and it is a valid reason to want to have electronic voting machines. The thing is, why is it not sufficient to make an electronic ballot-printing machine, which then could be verified by a blind person using a simple barcode scanner, or which could be printed with raised letters? Why must the voting be completely electronic (i.e. Direct Recording Electronic)? Is it right to say that just because a blind person may not be able to verify a printed paper ballot on their own, that nobody else should be allowed to verify their votes either? There are certainly ways that ballots could be designed that would allow blind people to verify their votes without assistance, but even if this were impossible, that wouldn't be a good reason to eliminate paper ballots, it is merely an argument for machines that aid in filling out and verifying the ballots.
Finally, there are the arguments that electronic voting allows us to tally votes cheaper and quicker. My response is that we should take the time and money to get our elections right. Also, DRE's aren't more efficient at tallying our votes if they don't record our votes at all.
Unless we can build an electronic voting system that can meet these specifications before the 2004 election, I have little confidence in any vote cast using DRE's, and I recommend at least a temporary return to old-fashioned hand-written and hand-counted paper ballots.
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:2)
This is offtopic, but I'm asking a lot of the same questions about RFID. How much less is Wal-Mart going to price a chipped bottle of shampoo than what they're charging me now? Because if it's, like, ten cents I think I can splurge.
I don't expect any good answers, but Stugots is DEAD-ON when he sez that we should at least be asking the right frickin' questions.
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:2)
You can make ballots much easier to read with touch-screen voting. The ballot for my last local election had a few dozen questions including mayor, city council and a few referedum questions. Even with a very small font the ballot was the size of a newspaper page. This not only annoying; it makes it more likely that someone will make a mistake, reducing the legitimacy of the election.
With touch-screen voting you can dedicate a separate screen t
Re:Why electronic voting? (Score:3, Interesting)
Once Again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Currently, we have companies making the voting software which is not transparant, which have ties to political parties (from the top of the company, no less), and to top it off apparently can't design a decent, reliable application to save their very lives.
As I said before, THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE
The solution to Electronic Voting (Score:4, Insightful)
An act of civil disobediance is needed by MANY people across the US. Simply disseminate via internet simple instructions for how to adjust the votes on various types of electronic machines, and use them to cast an enourmous amount of votes for the least likely canidate in every single election. If this happened in even a few cases around the country the news and governement would have no choice but to take electronic tampering completely seriously. If it happened thousands of times in the next election I think Diebold, et al, would most likely backpedal to an open source and completely transparent system so fast it'd set their boardroom carpets afire.
Would I myself chance jail in order to commit an act of civil disobediance which could forever ensure the future of voting is fair and trustworthy for ordinary citizens? Just show me the simple instructions on how to get the job done...
Jonah Hex
I'd rather not vote on a touch-screen. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not worried about germs or anything... but seeing a bunch of finger-print crud on one place on the screen when you're about to place your vote might have some impact, not even considering the basic security concerns.
What's wrong with paper & pencil? Countries all over the world count those in remarkably small ammounts of time - do we HAVE to have an instant ballot in exchange for a loss of a paper trail and many layers of security concerns? This part is already redundant... but it NEEDS to be redundantly said to as many people as possible.
Ryan Fenton
Re:I'd rather not vote on a touch-screen. (Score:2, Flamebait)
1) US citizens can't count
2) US citizens are too stupid to use pen and paper
3) US politicians wants to fuck over the citizens
I'm guessing you can pick any two
yeah, yeah
Tippex on screen (Score:2)
Here's what we nedd... (Score:5, Interesting)
A touch screen voting booth that lets voters select the canidates they want.
After the voter casts their vote the booth prints out a ballot that's a machine readable.
The voter checks to make sure that the canidates they selected are recorded on the ballot and feeds it into a optical reader. It's this machine that actually records the voter's vote.
The touch screen machines and the optical reader should be produced by two seprate companies and operate on different networks and they should both keep a tally. If the two systems ever get out of synch we will automatically know that a problem has occured. If such cases we can fall back on the paper ballet. Since it was laser printed it will avoid all the problems Florida judges had with hanging chads and strange marks left by stupid voters.
This way not only do we get the benifit of a machine count but a paper trail to boot.
Re:Here's what we nedd... (Score:5, Insightful)
The solution? "Lets use computers." Yet some how the assumption leaked in that the computers used to do the balloting had to be the same machines that tallied the votes as well. This is a paradigm that should be abollished as soon as possible. While we fix one problem (ballots not reflecting voter preferences properly), we introduce another (allowing increased access to the device doing the tallying).
The solution as the original comment said is to split the process. Use computers to create 'standardized' ballots, and to simplify/error check each voters choice making. And let the voter see a human readable ballot that they can confirm and turn in at a different part of the polling station.
Tallying can be done in a sepparate process, much the way scan-tron type ballots are counted today quickly and accurately.
Some thoughts / added benefits:
1. The paper trail. Voters see their votes correctly printed on paper. And the ballot machines can be used as a double check to make sure no ballots were destroyed. (added reassurance against tampering, since now it requires a coordinated attack both physical and electronic).
2. If you make the ballot human & computer readable (just like your account number on checks) you can verrify the ballot and not have to assume that the bar code the ballot machine produces matches the text.
3. If the ballot form is standardized then the voting equipment becomes commoditized. States / localities can choose the balloting and tallying equipment manufacturers to buy from independently and no one is tied to a given manufacturer for either device. They can even purchace from more than one vendor for the balloting devices. This will drive down prices, as well as letting the govornment take trustworthiness into account when purchacing equipment.
It would be great if legislatures could demand this type of system instead of letting each district try to 'roll your own' and get unknown results in terms of reliability / trustworthiness. It would also mean we wouldn't have to put anywhere near as much trust in the makers of the machines.
Uh. (Score:2)
Re:Here's what we nedd... (Score:2)
Re:Here's what we nedd... (Score:2)
Each voting place would be equipped with machines - machines that are open source based (in fact you could write your own and put it inside a PDA with a bar code reader) - that will read back what the bar code says.
In case of a recount if anyone asserts that the bar codes do not reflect the voter's choice, then there the human readible text (including the voter's choices) on the printed ballot is available.
Is this really necessary? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Is this really necessary? (Score:2)
hmm (Score:2, Funny)
Electronic voting is bad news right now (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Electronic voting is bad news right now (Score:2, Funny)
I live in GA (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope the Republicans don't use these machines to pull a fast one - if we find out after the fact, we won't get to change Presidents, as happened in 2000.
Re:I live in GA (Score:4, Informative)
"In Georgia, an Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll shows Democratic Sen. Max Cleland with a 49%-to-44% lead over Republican Rep. Saxby Chambliss."
Final Result
53 to 46 percent Chambliss
HOW ACCURATE?
Polls had Cleland winning by 2 and 5 points, he lost by 7
POST POLL SWING:
9 to 12 points towards Republican Party
ThHis is from an article [scoop.co.nz] on Scoop.
Re:I live in GA (Score:2, Funny)
The only reason you think this election was "fixed" is because your side didn't win.
Re:I live in GA (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I live in GA (Score:3, Interesting)
In 2000, I voted for a Democratic President (Al Gore) using a paper ballot. Everyone that I talked to did as well. That night I fell asleep to the news that Al Gore was declared the new president. I woke up around 2AM to the television blaring that Bush had taken Florida, and thus the election. I was living in Tallahassee at the time - attending the Florida State University.
I went down to the Capitol at about 3AM and I was arrested for Civil Dis
A great argument (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the best arguments in the article is this:
"What we do know is that every condition needed for fraud did exist. The question is not whether it has happened. The question is whether it can happen."
Granted, there's no perfect security. But electronic voting companies seem to have a problem at least making an attempt to fix any possible vulnerabilities. When the Patriot Act passed 98-1 in the Senate, the lone dissenter (Russ Feingold of WI) said that it's not whether or not people have abused the law... it's that the potential exists. Sometimes it's really hard to teach someone the value of security until they've been victimized/directly affected by it. The problem, unfortunately, is proving that it happened.
With regard to Cox's response on a paper trail:
"It really adds nothing to the system, [and] the people who think it will don't understand the history of voter fraud we've had with paper."
Personally, I don't think removing one potential of fraud and replacing it with another really solves any problem. And suppose something does go wrong (massive failure, serious bug, fraud)? Is there anything to fall back on? And at least if you want to fix the elections, it makes it a bit more difficult.
Talking with your representives *does* help (Score:5, Informative)
I spoke to Rep. Lewis about this issue at one of his "Meet and Greet" sessions several months ago. Contacting your representative *does* have an impact.
That is the point of electronic voiting (Score:3, Insightful)
They will not wind up on TV and the same people who have faked votes over history (LBJ in Texas, Daily in Chicago, etc.) can keep doing their thing. There is a long history of vote fraud in the USA. Those in charge just don't want it to wind up on TV and embarrassing themselfs.
Patching and Code Oversight (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as I'm concerned, these "patches" are "patching" the election results, not the voting equipment.
needless complexity (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a blog about the issue in Canada: Paper Vote Canada [papervotecanada.ca].
Why electronic voting (Score:2, Insightful)
Additional Point (Score:2, Interesting)
On a similar no
Anonymity and coercion? (Score:2)
That's a major leap of faith. There's a gaping down-side in that you cannot guarantee privacy of a home ballot. What's to stop a someone from overseeing their spouse's vote, or groups from holding "voting parties"? Or voters collective auctioning blocks of PIN numbers on eBay?
Xix.
Bah! (Score:4, Insightful)
What sort of stupid question is that? Next up on Slashdot! Clothing! Does it cure cancer, or will it cause the downfall of civilization as we know it?
Correct voting answer - it fixes some serious problems with current systems, introduces some potentially serious problems, and is being pushed not as part of an Evil Conspiracy, but by well-meaning but niave people who seek a technological panacea despite not really understanding the concepts involved. It's cargo cult security - "these systems are secure, and they're electronic, so lets if we need security, we just need to make everything electronic!". Morons.
Florida Judge denies suit requiring paper trail (Score:4, Interesting)
voting preservation (Score:2)
Not the point... (Score:5, Insightful)
This totally misses the point. The point is not whether voter fraud has been committed, the point is that there's no way to tell if it was or wasn't.
Diebold's system is completely proprietary; we can't examine it to see if there are any "loopholes" or not, and we can't check its security. We can't go back and audit to make sure nothing funny happened. Adding icing to the cake, the Diebold leadership is openly pro-Republican.
To summarize; by adopting Diebold's system here in GA, we've privatized the election by giving complete control over it to a private corporation that's biased in favor of a particular outcome. To say it smells fishy would be an understatement of monumental proportions.
Instead of focusing on whether fraud occurred or not, we need to be demanding an election system that is auditable and verifiable to the people. Open elections are key to democracy; Diebold's system is anything but open.
I am a Republican. (Score:3, Insightful)
Unfortunately, after a fruitless argument with a Democrat Virginia election official at the Fairfax Fair in October, I suspect the problem is massive ignorance. He assured me condescendingly that he could get a printout of local Vote totals any time he wanted, so what was the point of a paper trail.
Unfortunately, such massive ignorance leaves the system op
Why doesn't anybody get it? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't trust anyone that governs me to sit the right way on a toilet seat, much less control an easily tampered file that keeps them in power.
(Apologies to Rowan Atkinson.)
Re:Why doesn't anybody get it? (Score:2)
Not to mention that the votes aren't kept during tabulation, rather the subtotals are sent in. Even easier to abuse or fail.
It's not that bad really... (Score:4, Informative)
The only problems with the system that I can see are human. If you work with another election judge and, for instance, encode the wrong cards repeatedly for the other party and don't cancel the ballots, but submit them, then you can tamper the vote. The same thing could happen with a paper system, but admittedly it is harder and slower to cast lots of fake ballots.
In the end, it's up to the election judges and the local board of elections to make sure every vote counts, just as it would be with a paper system.
Re:It's not that bad really... (Score:3, Interesting)
Out of curiosity, was the class also taught by Diebold folks? I think you are missing the point most people here are making. You are assuming that everything will work just the way they told you it will work. But they will not let anyone examine the source code, they will not allow a paper trail, etc. So how do you know that you are not being lied to?
I commend yo
Links (Score:3, Informative)
Is it the best solution or is a conspiracy afoot? (Score:3, Interesting)
Touch screen voting is the best solution as long as votes are recorded in an auditable manner (paper record), but there is a conspiracy afoot to prevent autiting of the voting process and to eliminate any possibility of investigation if it is beleived that the process was corrupted in any way.
If they can't sort it out, I'd rather they required the old-fasioned, manually recorded, paper ballot. I see no reason for the results to be tabulated on that evening after the vote took place (except for possibly increased advertising revenues for the networks, but BOO fscking HOO!).
Voting should be free (Score:3, Insightful)
Are elections really this time sensitive? (Score:2)
What are we fixing? (Score:2)
They're fixing the election, of course. Sheesh, you must be new here.
Open Voting Consortium (Score:3, Informative)
The first line says most of the story:
The other part of the story is that the software produces a paper ballot that can be read by both the voters and by machine.
The ballot-producing machine itself can be touch screen - or something else for use by physically impaired voters.
The system is a) inexpensive, b) voter verifiable, c) adaptable to the needs of voters with physical impairments and d) open source.
Is There A Conspiracy Afoot, He Asks? (Score:3, Insightful)
The CEO of Diebold promises to deliver his state to George Bush in 2004.
Another voting machine company is a front for the
CIA.
And none of the machines by anybody can be audited, despite the fact that every other financial industry machine made by the same companies is auditable.
You think?
Bring Back Ostraca (Score:3, Funny)
Not only could we count these now - but any historical dispute arising up to 2500 years later as to the result of an election would be easily settled - pot shards from 500BC and earlier have been found, and with a bit of care we could even stretch the traceability to 35,000 years (the oldest known ceramics date from around this age).
OK - people have to mark their own pot shard, and it relies on the probity of the counting officials, but it's still a damn sight better than relying on dodgy software and potentially biased private vote counting.
Besides, the thought of the Supreme Court being deluged with shards of pottery in case of dispute is a nice image.
Too bad the source code leaks of these machines... (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope that none of the technologists / scientists and "hax0rs" are tainted by this dubious code being available.
Afterall, if there is ANYTHING questionable about the UPCOMING Nov. 2004 election, it's not which canditate was voted for - it's WHO to blame for HACKING things.
The solution will be a simple signature on some ambiguous bill (Patriot ][ anyone?) that will make ALL REVERSE ENGINEERING / DISASSEMBLY / and other potentially controversial in-the-name-of-science acts ILLEGAL without government approval.
Afterall, if the government is the entity in question, they can easily secure their position
"over" the people by knocking down any non-gov't sanctioned research activity.
Management vs Engineers (Score:4, Interesting)
The scientists don't want it and think it's unsafe. From my readings of major scientific magazines and journals, e-voting as it is being implemented in the US is raising major alarm bells.
People well-versed in computer technology think it's dangerous and unsafe.
Management (ie. the electoral officials) want it.
Companies (who will profit from it) want it.
Basically those who are usually the most gung-ho about new technology and most technologically literate think the idea needs careful thinking and the technology is flawed. Those who are the most technologically illiterate and those who stand to make money out of it are all for it. This is a case of management over-riding the concerns of the engineers who are waving red flags going "Danger, danger".
I see a disaster in the making here.
Oh well, it will all come out in the wash when lawsuits from losing candidates start. Or we have another Florida, except this time as another poster pointed out as there is no audit trail, we'll have to flip a coin to see who is President. Or I guess redo the entire election.
War-Voting - Just Do It. (Score:4, Funny)
I mean, the other politicians can't really cry foul, because they said themselves "paper trails aren't nescesary" and in effect "we trust the effectiveness of the system"
On concern with diebold's systems (Score:2, Interesting)
Analog soothes peoples' psyche - LOTTO 4 example (Score:3, Insightful)
Digital technology that can determine 6 random numbers has existed for over 30 years now - So why then, do we still use such a blantantly ANALOG method of determining who will receive Millions of US dollars every week?!
The answer is simple - those devices are believeable. Ironically, if Diebold and Mrs. Harris^H^H^H^H^H^H Cox really think that unauditable digital voting machines are "the only best solution" they are sorely mistaken.
With something as significant as electing the MOST POWERFUL MAN IN THE WORLD at stake, why choose an unauditable digital medium? If every night the LOTTO displayed 6 random digits on the screen, people wouldn't buy it! Why should we buy what these machines say about our[US here] Democratic Republic?!?!?
The city governments that put ELECTORAL power in these machines are exponentially mistaken.
Diebold claims that NO OTHER VOTING SOLUTION IS AVAILABLE...
Now, while I can't find the link, a superior method for e-voting machine auditing does exist. It consists of a digital voting machine that provides a perforated ticket than can be separated in two. One half can be deposited into a voting box, and the other can kept by the recipient as verification.
Can someone please post a link to that article? [I saw it here on
which Georgia? (Score:2)
Even with paper last parlament elections in Georgia fired so much conflicts that it led the republic to one more revolution, the president has resigned and they had to re-elect the president.
If you
Interesting ... (Score:2)
Seems to me that they are a little too familiar with the subject. Perhaps reporters should ask some questions here. "That's interesting. Could you give me some details of how a recent Georgia election was 'fixed'? What was your part in that election?"
Georgia History - Repeat? (Score:2)
The controversy surrounding the Florida recounts and the 2000 Presidential election still simmers.
And recently a number of prestigious computer scientists came out on record as cautioning against all of the possible problems with electronic voting.
And still I hear recently of some effort where electronic voting is being made available to mall shoppers in Orange County.
But, Georgia?!?
For those with short memories, Georgia was to the 1800 election [kidsource.com] as Florida was to the 2000 election.
The current issue of
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:4, Funny)
Additional Confusion (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:4, Insightful)
If you have images off, it's not going to take more than 5 seconds to figure out which Georgia we're talking about.
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2)
(Besides, you're forgetting the stereotype that we the international readers are so much smarter anyway that we'd know that Georgia is also a country.)
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:3, Insightful)
US government has its own special significance... (Score:2)
Whether we like it or not, the US is the most powerful country on Earth, with an enormous economic and military influence. Its government consequently has the diplomatic clout to influence governments the world over, for good and bad. Its "soft power", as the generator of more exported popular culture than anywhere else on Earth, and much of the world's scientific output, is also profound.
Additionally, for a native English speaker
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2)
Heck, that Georgia place in the CIS probably didn't even exist before 1989?
Only for about 2300 years! History of Georgia [wikipedia.org]
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, by the same token, most people here, in Georgia, where I am unfortunate enough to live, are too uneducated to hack a voting machine, so democracy is pretty much safe here.
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't mod this as funny.
Re:Slashdot is an international site (Score:2, Insightful)
What a great counter to my point! If my point was that Greenwich was a country...alas, it was not. The point was that by the 1880's Britain was undoubtedly the reigning world superpower. France tried to resist Greenwich, England as the world's Prime Meridian in favor of its own Paris, but
Consider the whole world when writing forSlashdot (Score:2)
Re:If it makes voting easier... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:If it makes voting easier... (Score:3, Interesting)
The "old" people I know were offended by the media getting these idiots and making them all look ignorant.
But you are right, the ballot wasnt confusing (I was in FL at the time) and election workers will help out.
Re:It happened in FLA. (Score:2)
Re:It happened in FLA. (Score:2)
I could write a column suggesting that the 2000 election was rigged by space aliens with the help of Bat Boy, and it wouldn't be much less credible than this.
Absentee ballots as well... (Score:2)
The courts in Florida decided that this was a "non-issue" even though the number of rejected absentee ballots in those districts was more than enough to change the result of the statewide election.
The Gore lawyers made the mistake of asking that the ballots accepted with incorrect or incomplete in
Repetition != News (Score:4, Insightful)
Amen to that.
I'm concerned about this issue -- it's a hot button for me -- but damn, the responses cover a very limited range, over and over
-kgj
Re:No problem at all (Score:2)
Re:No problem at all (Score:2)
Re:this isn't rocket science (Score:3, Insightful)
What is the deal. (Score:2)
Anyway thanks for any insight.