How To Lose An Election 828
smooth wombat writes "CNN has posted a story to their site about electronic votes from Miami-Dade County's first widespread use of touchscreen voting machines that were lost due to a computer crash.: 'The malfunction was made public after the Miami-Dade Election Reform Coalition, a citizen's group, requested all data from the 2002 gubernatorial primary between Democratic candidates Janet Reno and Bill McBride.' Other groups are challenging a state rule preventing counties that use the machines from conducting manual recounts from them." Reader fatwater adds a link to the New York Times' coverage.
Ha! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ha! (Score:3, Interesting)
To err is human... (Score:4, Funny)
-- Anonymous
We need a big... (Score:2, Interesting)
This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
Absolutely, positively NOT. Permitting a voter to walk away from the polls with hard evidence of how he voted is an open invitation to corruption and coercion.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
"Show me your receipt showing a vote for XXX or else..."
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I absolutely disagree with the "we want everyone to vote" bit. If you (as a voter) are unwilling or unable to understand the issues, and can't even take enough interest to know who is running in the major offices of an election, you should not vote. I'd also add in that if you (in the general) are receiving federal handouts you should not be able to vote.
Government should always be what is needed, not what can I get out of it.
C
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
Dude, who votes in your world?
Not people who work on goverment contracts, since the money comes from the government.
People who work for the government probably could not vote, since they take money from government. This category is rather large and would seem to include civil servants, elected officials, police officers, firefighters, and members of the armed forces.
People who get tax refunds couldn't vote, and people on welfare and/or social security obviously couldn't vote. Getting old or going on the
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.democratandchronicle.com/news/0618SM4K
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Interesting)
Joe Sixpack presses onscreen button for Candidate X and gets a printed receipt of his vote. He reads it, makes sure that it says Candidate X and not Candidate W (not so subtle, I know). Then presses the, "Yes, that is my final answer" button and then he deposits his receipt (e.g. via a mechanism similar to check deposits) back into the machine. That way you have the e-votes PLUS the paper trail.
Re:Bad argument. (Score:3, Insightful)
We prefer to arrest people AFTER THEY HAVE COMMITTED A CRIME. I know, it's all new fangled, and hard to wrap your head around, but it is the way we do things 'round here. Y'all got that?
Dear God, I hope I never use a machine that you sysadmin. By your logic, we shouldn't have passwords, IDSs, or backups. Because, you know, if anyone does anything bad we can just arrest them.
It's called taking preventative measures, and this particular preventative measure -- not letting the voter keep a record of th
Re:Bad argument. (Score:4, Interesting)
Arrested by who? The guy who just stole the election?
Prosecuted by who? The D.A. who was just installed by a corrupt political machine?
At least the judge, who was _surely_ elected in a fair and reasonable manner, will give him a fair trial...
Do the math. When you have voting corruption, it's no longer reasonable to assume that people will be arrested and prosecuted for crimes they commit. Especially when their crimes benefit the corrupt powers.
Re:Bad argument. (Score:4, Interesting)
I must of missed something. Have they arrested anyone in the White House for exposing the identity of a CIA agent. That was a felony, there are a few people in the White House who know who did it and in fact no on has been arrested "AFTER THEY COMMITTED A CRIME", a felony punishable by I think 10 years in the federal pen.
Sorry but in this country we only arrest some people who commit crimes, others get off scot free especially if they have money or connections. We often frame people for crimes they didn't commit, especially if they are poor minorities, for example the governor of Illinois had to take everyone off death row after it became apparent Illinois police and DA's were time after time framing poor minorities for crimes they didn't commit and the frames were falling apart thanks to DNA testing.
All in all the U.S. isn't the bastion of perfection in "Freedom and Deomcracy" you seem to think it is.
The other obvious problem with relying on local police to enforce election law is its not uncommon for the police to be involved in the election rigging. Mayor's and elected county sherrifs have in the past frequently been involved in vote rigging. There were accusations police in Florida were obstructing access to polls in poor black areas in the 2000 elections.
Another tangential example, a number of people in Afghanistan have been killed recently because they were carrying papers showing they had registered to vote. The remnants of the Taliban and local war lords who are opposed to the elections are killing people for registering. All in all, voters carrying around slips of paper is not a good idea. I see today Doctors Without Borders has decided Afghanistan is so dangerous today they are pulling out after 24 years. Kind of undercuts the Bush administration of what a showcase of success the new Afghanistan is.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
The whole idea of print a receipt, verify it says what you want, and deposit it into a secured ballot box makes good sense to most people, and seems the logical way to handle this--and it even uses the same backup technologies that we've been using for decades, so it's not a huge additional burden on the system.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea of having a paper copy to backup the computer means that eventually, only a few random recounts will be needed as people come to trust the initial computer count. Also, the computer print out may make manual recounts easier due to clear format, etc.
People trust ATMs, because they can always check their statement later - would you like the banks to stop sending you a statement, and just trust their computers to correctly handle their money with no recourse if it gets it wrong?
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Informative)
Probably the most famous real-world case of push poling was what Bush's campaign did to McCain in South Carolina. His campaign asked: "Would you be more likely or less likely to vote for John McCain for president if you knew he had fathered an illegitimate black child?". McCain was campaining with his adopted Bangladeshi daughter - having semi-dark skin, this helped convince people that the question on the poll was, in fact, an illegitimate black child.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
One quibble: the voters should not keep their receipts. Voter-held receipts are useless in the event of a recount -- how do you know that the receipt the voter brings in is actually the one he got on Election Day? -- and are actively dangerous, in that they provide a means for influencing elections through threat or bribery. ("Vote for candidate X or I'll break your kneecaps" / "Vote for candidate Y and I'll give you a raise"). The best sequence of events is to get the receipt, look it over to verify that it says what you want it to say -- and there's no reason receipts couldn't be printed in Braille for blind voters; some ATM receipts already are -- and deposit it in a ballot box.
For those who say, "But ballot boxes can be stuffed or stolen!" -- yes, this is true, and no election method yet devised is foolproof. But this would be a hell of a lot better than what we've got now.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:4, Insightful)
Another thing that make this a BS excuse is that a jammed printer only means one lost printed receipt and a sign that says "Voting machine out of order" rather than thousands of votes mysteriously lost to a computer crash. People understand printer jams and can deal with them (assuming it would happen, even if rarely).
-matthew
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
You then take this printed ballot that is both human and machine readable (maybe using a font like you find on the numbers of your checks) and put it in a box. These ballots are now counted by another machine.
Now you have solved the problems that people were so concerned about in Florida:
1) confusing ballot forms are elminated
2) antiquated systems with chads and ballots that can degrade during a recount are eliminated
It's better than touch screen voting with a database because the process of creating the ballot and counting it are seperated. There is a paper ballot, and nobody has to trust the voting machine. The voter can look at the ballot and see if it says what they want it to. There is a "paper trail" of real ballots that can be manually counted.
If someone prints a ballot and doesn't put it in the box, it doesn't count... it's not a vote.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
Even easier.
Call up the Autotote corporation. They make the machines you use to bet at the horse-race tracks. Each time you bet, you get a receipt on a slip of paper; the font at the top is nice and readable, explaining your bet "#15 to win in race 7", and below that's a 2d barcode with the same info recorded.
When the race is over, you go to anothe
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:4, Insightful)
Absolutely.
Now how, exactly, do you propose to provide a mechanism in which it is guaranteed to the voter that their recorded vote is the same as that which is on their receipt, without throwing away any of the anonymity characteristics that are also crucial to voting?
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:4, Insightful)
Admittedly this is a facile answer to a complex problem, but people like Peter Neumann have thought deeply about the problem for more than 30 years and have developed some solutions - none of which Diebold uses.
sPh
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3)
In Minnesota (or at least my county...don't know if this is state wide) our ballets are a Legal sheet of heavy stock paper. They are also rather simple...the candidates have triangles pointing at their names. To vote for a candidate, draw a line through the name of the person you are voting for, connecting the triangles. Even
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't trust a Diebold voting machine any further than I could throw it. Until the auditing and security requirements for electronic voting machines are stricter than those required for electronic gambling machines, they have no place whatsoever in the polling place.
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:5, Insightful)
Neither do our Democratic overlords and their corporate buddies, when the Democrats are in charge.
It's all football. The only thing that changes is the color of the jerseys.
Max
Re:This is why there need to be reform (Score:3, Insightful)
Just about everyone I know who votes Republican - often against their own interests - gives that same excuse: "It doesn't matter, because they're all the same." Well, if the last few years have shown anything at all, it's that they are most certainly not the same, and if you don't think so you're just not paying attention to what's been going down lately.
Election Observers (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Election Observers (Score:3, Interesting)
I wish I thought this was a silly idea. Aside from the fact that it may make Birchers go bugfuck ... er, more bugfuck ... it might be a good idea. An official request has been made; I haven't heard whether there's been an official response.
"Several members of the [US] House of Representatives have requested the United Nations to send observers to monitor the November 2 US presidential election to avoid a contentious vote like in 2000, when the outcome
Re:Election Observers (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Tinfoil hat alert!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
As for Mao its noteworthy that he is dead. But his party still runs China, but for some reason you didn't list Jiang Zemin or Wen Jiabao. They've moderated since Mao but they are still basically the same party and a repressive dictatorship for all practical purposes. The only thing thats changed is they now allow private ownership of capital and a lot of rich American business men and multinationals are making a pretty penny there so right wingers don't bad mouth them anymore.
I think Muammar is the best friends of the Bush administration now, since he turned over his WMD's, WMD's I wager he bought some just so he could turn them over and get the sanctions lifted. They like him because they can claim him as proof their "get tough" policy in Iraq worked though that is a dubious claim. I'm pretty sure Cheney/Halliburton and the rest of the U.S. oil and gas industry are chomping at the bit to do business with Muammar and get back in to his oil fields. Again as long as there is money to be made the U.S. LOVES dictators.
Hugo Chavez is democratically elected. He is a socialist and the Republican's hate him with a passion, he hates them too, but he was still elected. The Bush administration has tried to overthrow him at least once, and if they succeed that would probably lead to a dictatorship, but Venezuala isn't under one now.
Khomeini, well that one is interesting. He came to power because the U.S. toppled the elected government of Iran when they nationalized their oil fields taking control of them from their former colonial masters the British, who were taking the lions share of the profits. The U.S. installed the Shah of Iran who was a brutal repressive dictator. The Iranians turned to Khomeni because they hated the Shah more, and hate the U.S. to this day for inflicting him on them.
Re:Tinfoil hat alert!!! (Score:3, Informative)
But Hitler did not yet hold the nation in thrall. Hitler's initial election into office and his use of constitutionally enshrined mechanisms to shore up power have led to the myth that his country elected him dictator and that a majority supported his ascent. He was made Chancellor i
Re:Tinfoil hat alert!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Having refreshed my memory on Venezuela I see they are going ahead with a Chavez recall August 15, the recall being the thing Chavez has been resisting, not elections. He was elected to a six year term in 2000, though the elections were heavily disputed, just like America's 2000 election. Much of the blame then fell on electronic voting, provide by America's own Republican backed ES&S. Not sure why they would have trusted their election to a compan
What about a crash during an election? (Score:3, Insightful)
Multiply the number of machines in use across the country and eventually this will happen.
Do you ask all the voters who used that machine to come back and vote again ? Probably not.
Re:What about a crash during an election? (Score:2)
However IMHO redundancy whether it be mirrored hard drives or paper records is a plus in my book when it comes to elections. After all elections are kind of important to our system of government and is one area where skimping probably isn't a good idea...
Re:What about a crash during an election? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is entirely possible to produce a reliable e-voting system
Re:What about a crash during an election? (Score:3, Insightful)
A computer is an inscrutible black box. How do you know what's going on inside it? Sure, you can open the source code up for inspection. But how do you know that cod
Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:5, Insightful)
Joining the ACLU in Judge Susan B. Kirkland's courtroom were several other organizations that cited evidence in recent elections in Florida and Virginia that recorded abnormal numbers of blank votes or computer glitches that resulted in incorrect vote tallies.
Under questioning by the groups' attorneys, Division of Elections official Paul Craft said, ``All machines experience problems,'' but he did not know of any problem that had resulted in an inaccurate vote tally in Florida.
George Waas, of the state attorney general's office, told Kirkland that the advocates were suffering from ``the sky- is-falling syndrome.''
Sorry, but due to issues that happened in the 2000 Presidential Election in Florida I would certainly be "suffering" from the "sky-is-falling syndrome" too.
Why the fuck can they not manually recount votes? I honestly believe that when we elect someone to office we should be 100% certain that they were elected fair and square. None of this pre-election bullshit of skimming out legal voters through third parties, none of this "tough, the machines are right" shit, and certainly allow a recount.
Cheating is going to run rampant if there is no manual backup mechanism available. Why the hell was this written into law?
The sky-is-falling isn't exactly the way to describe this. The sky-has-fallen might be better.
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not trying to defend the law here, but the thinking is probably this: no counting of 60 million objects is ever going to be perfect or precise. Every time you recount you will get a different answer. Yet an election must have a "final answer (tm)" in some definite amount of time, otherwise there will be a perception that it is being s
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:3, Insightful)
Really? Banks seem to have no problem counting millions, and even billions. Think people complain when their vote goes missing? Try seeing what they do when their paycheck goes missing.
Maybe we should be getting the banks to handle the elections?
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:4, Informative)
You can go doublecheck what you deposited last week but you can't (and shouldn't be able to) go back and doublecheck how you voted last week.
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:5, Insightful)
When you have the NAACP endorsing a white democrat over a black republican, what is going on here?
When you have the ACLU arguing against the outlawing of child pornography, yet agreeing with Reno that gun ownership is not an individual human right, what is going on here?
No thank you. I have decided that such organizations are not worth my time, and that other organizations are far more worthy of my money.
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:3, Insightful)
One is a clear-cut case of free speech rights, and the other is a constitutionally-ambiguous issue of gun ownership, and the definition of a "well-regulated militia."
Re:Cat got your tongue Florida? (Score:5, Insightful)
If that candidate's policies are better for African Americans overall, the NAACP's action was right. Blindly endorsing a candidate solely based on the color of his skin would be silly.
verification (Score:5, Insightful)
Who did you vote for in the last election that you participated in? Can you prove it? Can they prove it? Why can't I verify if my vote was even counted let alone who they recorded it for? Why is there no verification or personal audit trail available for elections?
Re:verification (Score:4, Informative)
So that you cannot be held personally responsible by a repressive regime when they find out who you voted for.
Verification? What about anonymous voting?? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd rather take the chance that my vote may not be counted due to machine/process flaws than potentially letting politicians, corporations, and political activist groups knowing who I voted for.
Re:Verification? What about anonymous voting?? (Score:3, Insightful)
The machines we have been using have worked rather well for the many many many years they have been in use. Why should we open ourselves to malicious code, malicious coders under the guidance of malicious politicians, and general problems?
How do we know no one is watching when we pull that lever or touch that screen?
Best quote (Score:2, Insightful)
In December, officials began backing up the data daily, to help avoid similar data wipeouts in the future, said Seth Kaplan, spokesman for the county's elections supervisor, Constance Kaplan.
Hey, here's a novel IT solution: BACKUP YOUR DATA! Ever hear of fault tolerant disk subsystems? Sheesh!
why electronic? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:why electronic? (Score:4, Insightful)
UK elections are done with pen and paper and the results are in overnight. Since the number of people available to do the counting is more or less proportional to the number of people who need to vote, I see no reason why a US national election run with pen and paper ballots would take any longer to count.
Re:why electronic? (Score:3, Interesting)
BlackBoxVoting.org [blackboxvoting.org] has discussed this several times, although that site has its own partisan spin. It isn't something that is discussed much though.
sPh
No big surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
Punch card balloting is an extremely accurate and economical way to tally votes.
Instead of being men and telling voters to read the damn ballot and punch the card completely next time, we get all boo-hooey over a few idiots who don't do either, and let ourselves get whipped up into making stupid decisions by political opportunists exploiting said idiots.
Created Equal (Score:4, Insightful)
Another example (Score:3, Interesting)
Why Allow Recounts for "Voter Intent" (Score:5, Insightful)
Whoops, the Cat's Eaten It! (Score:5, Insightful)
Does anyone else feel that the November 2004 elections are shaping up to be some twisted Monty Python skit?
And no I'm NOT aiming for +2 Funny.
Seriously, we've got just over three months to go and the system is not only unimproved since the November 2000 disaster, it's actually worse. Now someone can just change the results in critical swing districts without a trace.
Add that with the Florida "Felons Who Can't Vote" rolls that were only released after a court fight, and then immediately abandoned by Florida election officials when it was revealed to be terribly flawed. But only after a court order to make them public, of course.
Maybe we can call in the U.N. to observe the elections for us. This is out of control. Cradle of Democracy my ass. We're heading to be the laughing stock of Democracy. And we're the punchline.
Re:Whoops, the Cat's Eaten It! (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems like we are no longer enamoured of democracy anymore. Over 80% of the people in this country live in a state that always votes for the same party. Over 90% of the people in this country live in a house district that has been specially made so as to always elect one party.
The way I see it only 10-20% of the people in America experience democracy.
Re:Who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
"So move. Go live in Ulan Bator or something. Who gives a fuck about you?"
"You" as in the American voter? Apparently piss few. Damn sad given how many people have served our country defending the privilege. Am I safe in assuming that you, who care so little about it, aren't among those ranks?
The amusing part is that many conservatives who are staying silent on the e-voting matter will be the FIRST to jump up and scream if their boy doesn't win the November 2004 elections.
Here's a simple test. Flip
Correction (Score:4, Informative)
The rule exempts not prevents the machines from conducting manual recounts (from paper receipts). Slight difference.
Voter confidence is the key or lack thereof (Score:5, Insightful)
We are talking about electing people to positions of power. If you remove the voting trail, you remove accountability. Power without accountability...saaaay, that's the way to instill voter confidence, huh?
Word needed. Fectassertion? Infalliclaimism? (Score:3, Insightful)
"This couldn't have happened because we have procedures in place that prevent it..."
For example: no recounts are allowed because no recounts are needed because our voting machines are perfect.
This rhetorical technique is used all the time (and on both side of the aisle). For example: who could complain about making sure that felons don't vote (in those states where felons are not allowed to vote?) On the other hand, who wouldn't complain about disenfranchising people whose first four letters of their first name, their surname, and their race happens to be the same as that of a felon?
If no paper trail for voting, no paper trail. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
As the submitter for this story (thanks Timothy) I always chuckle when I hear the excuses from Diebold et al for not putting in a paper trail for electronic voting machines. The usual excuse is that computers don't make mistakes.
If that is the opinion of those producing these machines and their backers then they wouldn't mind not getting a receipt when they go grocery or car shopping. In both instances computers are used to calculate the total bill including tax (if any).
By their logic since computers are used to perform this calculation, and, according to them, computers don't make mistakes, then there is no need for a receipt to show how much each item costs. Instead, they're just told how much they owe.
I'm sure grocers and others would love this. A few cents here, a few cents there. By the time the bill is rung up you could end up paying several dollars more than you should.
For all the protestations we make about other countries not having open and fair elections, there are certain parts of this country which aren't too far behind.
This is what we need.... (Score:5, Insightful)
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 machine readable yet understandable to the naked eye.
The voter checks to make sure that the canidates they selected are recorded on the ballot and then feeds it into a reader. It's this machine that actually records the voter's vote.
With this sysetm even if all the computer records are erased the paper ballots can either be re-scanned or counted by hand.
Re:This is what we need.... (Score:3, Insightful)
What happened to "put the tick in the box next to your candidate"? It scales REALLY well, doesn't cost millions, and can give you an accurate count within hours. And, recounts are more than p
Re:This is what we need.... (Score:4, Interesting)
In fact, I live in MN and thats how I've been voting for the last 7 years. The machines that read the ballot are even smart enough to detect common mistakes like two votes in the area and spit the ballot back out to be destoyed. The nice elderly person manageing the machine examines the old ballot, tells you what you did wrong, gives you a new ballot and sends you back to start again. The old ballot is shredded into another locked box.
This is not rocket science people, there is no need to use a computer to make a small mark on a piece of paper. What was Ockums Razor again? The simple solution tends to be correct.
from nyt (Score:3, Funny)
that sounds just like something that would come from florida
Audit trail w. old tech (Score:3, Interesting)
You mean something like a punch card or optical mark card. Hmmm
Ohio in the most recent election was still using punch cards. I always check my punchcard (the punch fields are numbered) against the column #'s on the ballot, and (since 2000) also check for 'chad'. It takes a few seconds to do so. Then I place the card in the locked voting bin. For all the bad press punchcards have gotten, I trust them more than an untested and potentially unsecure proprietary touch screen system.
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
The most important thing... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0307/S0006
Shows some of the security problems with the voting machines. Even if the article is over a year old, it's still troubling: storing results in MS Access databases, introducing the ability to "correct" vote tallies and erase the trail. If voting machines are going to be computer systems, they need to be designed from the ground up for security, not just "secure enough right now". And not having any backup as in this story? Sounds like these machines were made by amateurs.
In Riverside County (Score:3, Informative)
When the count resumes, the incumbent pulls ahead. The challenger demands an investigation. But there are no ballots to recount, and election officials allied with the incumbent refuse to release data that could shed light on whether there was tampering with the electronic records.
This isn't a paranoid fantasy. It's a true account of a recent election in Riverside County, Calif., reported by Andrew Gumbel of the British newspaper The Independent.
No no no, there won't be an election (Score:4, Insightful)
We will all live happily ever after...
Call your Rep to support HR2239! (Score:3, Informative)
For more information go here: http://verifiedvoting.org/resources/hr2239_volunt
Or to read the bill in full: http://www.theorator.com/bills108/hr2239.html [theorator.com]
Let's get this passed so we don't have to worry about anyone monkeying around in quite possibly one of the most important elections this country has seen in decades-with two very divergent paths for the American people.
A classic case... (Score:3, Funny)
This is a classic case of "Don't trust the mass media except when there's an article that I agree with, in which case, trust the mass media".
According to the
For the record... (Score:3, Interesting)
The first opinion that seems to stand out is that e-voting seems to be a Republican (read that as "right wing") conspiracy to harness elections. If these folks do their homework, they'd note a preponderance of e-voting initiatives are being pushed in majority Democratic districts.
The second, almost universal, view seems to contain the idea that e-voting is OK and the only problems exist in the margins. The major details seemed to be accepted. The "gee whiz" glitz seems to have misplaced general intelligence.
Considering this medium draws a lot of people in various technology fields, I'd think the overwhelming opinion would be a complete distrust of e-voting based on the potential abuses of the technology and the means to manipulate the outcome of an election.
The basic logic points should produce an overwhelming distrust for this form of individual duty and trust.
How to Lose an Erection (Score:3, Funny)
Although I suppose reading any story involving Janet Reno would be pretty effective there as well.
Another Recent Article I Read (Score:4, Informative)
All the preferences were prechecked "Republican"!
Some of the immigrants complained to the Democratic Party officials in Florida and the Federal Elections Commission is investigating.
It doesn't get more obvious than this.
Why Florida is still part of the United States instead of Germany - or maybe North Korea - is a mystery to me.
Re:Another Recent Article I Read (Score:3, Interesting)
It was reported in the folio weekly [folioweekly.com]. Unfortunately they don't have an online version.
An interesting note in the story was the lady that discovered it and went to the Democratic Party headquarters in town was a republican. Who would have guessed?
Re:Another Recent Article I Read (Score:3, Interesting)
On a more serious note, considering the problems that Floriduh voters had in general during the last Presidential cycle, information like this should be taken with a grain of salt (and then throw that over your shoulder!).
Our computer crashed so we lost the votes. (Score:3, Insightful)
Cmmon this is slashdot, how about the real questions.
Re:Anybody else read that as... (Score:3, Funny)
Nope...just you.
Re:Yup, yup... (Score:2)
No (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yup, yup... (Score:3, Insightful)
The only reason I can think of for these voting systems to be *SO* insecure is so they can be tampered with, then if the deception is discovered they will say "oops, can't tell you who did it or how it happened... we don't keep records ;-)"
Okay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, I'll save you the five seconds it would take to google for "Diebold deliver electoral votes", with an article from the ol' KZoo Gazette: Here ya go. [mlive.com].
Come on. This is hardly new, nor is it a fact that is under dispute. The CEO of Diebold said he is committed to delivering Ohio's electoral votes to the president. Their machines have demonstrably failed in real elections. They have been caught violating regulations by installing uncertified software on deployed voting machines in California. Voters have been disenfranchised by them, a fact they do not dispute.
If you would like more information, my signature should provide one-click access to plenty of information.
The only reason you have to call "bullshit" is 1) ignorance and 2) a predisposition to believe that it couldn't be true, that a rich CEO of a powerful corporation couldn't possibly be trying to subvert democracy. Sadly the first is quite common, and the second unjustified by any analysis of history.
Re:Yup, yup... (Score:3, Interesting)
The attempt to repeat this same action in 2004 was also an accident?
When the same accident happens over and over, I get suspicious.
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:3, Insightful)
That would be the Republican majority in the Florida state congress.
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:3, Insightful)
Rather, it was that a private firm compiled that list at the behest of Republicans, which suggests that the racial disparity was politically motivated. Yes, there are numerous Hispanic felons in Florida, but Hispanics in Florida on the whole tend to vote Republican, while African-Americans in most of the U.S. tend to vote Democrat. The fact that almost no Hispanics were on the list commissioned by Republicans
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:5, Interesting)
It's teh correct decision. (Score:5, Insightful)
The votes are stored in a database. The question is, if there is a "recount", do the election workers have to print copies of each screen and count them by hand to make sure the machine counted right?
Obviously, that would be a waste of time - humans counting printouts of what's in the database will be less accurate than just taking the total from the database. Since it's a printout, any vote for a particular candidate looks identical to any other vote, so there's nothing there (like a hanging chad) to recount in the first place.
The *REAL* problem is that there are no paper coies of the ballot printed at the time of the vote in the first place. But that wasn't the question the election board was answering - the queston was 'I've got a computer here with a vote tally in it. Can I just look at the total votes, or do I have to print a piece of paper for each vote and count those?"
Re:It's teh correct decision. (Score:3, Funny)
Thats right! Because there is no way that a programming error could possibly result in an incorrect tally...
Re:It's teh correct decision. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No recounts in districts with touchscreen votin (Score:5, Interesting)
You cannot recount undervotes with a computer system, even if you print out receipts. An undervote is when the total number of votes for a race are less than the number of ballots cast. In punch card or other manual voting methods, the electronic system can miss a mark or a punch that is obviously a vote to a human eye.
However, there is no way for a human to look for an uncounted vote. If they user pressed the button on the computer it will be recorded. If they do not, it will warn them that they have not voted for races that they did not pick a candidate for. If it prints out a paper, the paper will not have the vote either. No stray marks, no hanging chads.
What does have a paper trail is the precinct by precinct totals. So each ballot location prints a summary from their machines which they verify and turn in. The summaries can be compared to the electronic totals.
I would promote a receipt system for the voter. The voter should be able to take a small receipt with some type of unidentifiable hash result on it. If there is an accusation of tampering or lost votes it could be compared to the records in the database to make sure it was counted appropriately. In order to prevent people from being held accountable by nefarious entities for their voting decisions, it should not be able to be reversed into a proof of voting.
In fact they could get one and leave one in a box for auditing of the computer system. Technically this is not a recount. When you check a manual count against a computer record, it is an audit, since there was no "counting" done in the first place.
Re:realtime paper backup? (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:America is turning into a scary place! (Score:3, Interesting)
Though, granted, the 1930s [wikipedia.org] were a scary time in history.