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E-Ballots: Will Your Vote Count?
pcworld ^ | January 05, 2004 | Janet Rae-Dupree

Posted on 01/05/2004 1:45:05 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran

E-Ballots: Will Your Vote Count?

Controversy surrounds new e-voting systems set for wide use in 2004 elections.

Janet Rae-Dupree From the February 2004 issue of PC World magazine Posted Monday, January 05, 2004 This election year, rather than punching holes or connecting dots on paper ballots, many of us will cast our votes on electronic touch screens.

Electronic voting systems are already in place in eight states and were used in last November's elections. Many more states will use them in this year's primaries and in the presidential election. Good news, right? After all, computers have to be more accurate and less subject to fraud than old chad-prone paper ballots--don't they?

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Critics say no, claiming that there are numerous problems with oversight and monitoring of the electronic election process. But change is already under way, including several federal bills that would require some form of permanent and immediate ballot trail, and better security.

At Your Fingertips The actual e-voting process is simple. Before entering the booth, voters receive a unique identifier (a smart card programmed for single use, for example, or a randomly generated number) to activate the process and make sure only one ballot is cast. At the booth, voters typically see an ATM-like interactive screen with candidates' names; then they touch the screen to make a selection--the computer does not let them choose too many. When they're done, voters see a summary screen with their choices, accept it, and press an icon to end their session.

The machines store votes on removable PC cards, where they stay until the polling booth closes. Poll workers can then hand-deliver the cards to a designated place for tallying, or counties can set up secure, direct connections to move the data into a central repository. Companies are secretive about whether such transmissions would go over the Internet, but such a path seems likely in at least some cases.

Before the polls open, the machines provide a printout showing that there has been no voting activity; at day's end, a similar printout shows total activity with tallies. If required, machines can also then print each of the ballots cast that day--though they cannot be traced to an individual.

E-voting advocates point to the many safeguards already built in against fraud and failure, including standardized federal certification of both software code and e-voting hardware by independent testing agencies (ITA). States often do their own review, too.

Pros and Cons Moreover, they say, there are many benefits of e-voting. For example, computers aid disabled voters, by permiting them to magnify screen text or by reading the ballot aloud to them. Multilingual voters can see ballots in any of a dozen languages. Results can be tallied instantly. And military personnel and civilians overseas can vote online, confident that their ballots will count.

So where is the problem? According to Electronic Frontier Foundation activist Ren Bucholz, it comes down to three major things. The federal testing standards date back to 1990, and were only superficially updated in 2000. Government agencies plan further updates to these standards, but that has not happened yet.

Moreover, the ITA reports are not open to the public. The public got its initial view of e-voting code only when an activist downloaded 40,000 pages of documents from an unprotected Diebold Elections Systems FTP server in 2003. That security breach led to reports by Johns Hopkins and Rice University computer researchers about the system's alleged vulnerabilities, which Diebold has challenged.

Lastly, though printing capabilities exist, they're used after polls close. Given that, like any computer, an e-voting machine can fail or be hacked, critics demand an immediate, permanent record of each ballot, reviewable by a voter prior to ballot submission.

Controversy doesn't stop at the mechanics of the process. Diebold chief executive Walden O'Dell said in a letter to Ohio Republicans that he was committed to delivering the state's electoral votes to Bush in 2004 (he also contributed to Bush's campaign). Such remarks raise doubt about the impartiality of e-voting system makers, according to critics. O'Dell has since told The Plain Dealer, a Cleveland newspaper, that he regrets the wording of the letter and insists that he has no daily involvement with Diebold's election systems division, which he maintains is a model of integrity.

Remedies Some change is already underway. Nevada law now requires that all e-voting machines in the state provide receipts for this year's election. Likewise, California has mandated that all e-votes in the state be confirmed with a paper receipt by 2006. Four other states have established the same requirement--but unlike California, they have not demanded that vendors retrofit existing systems to provide print-outs. Also, a few federal bills have been introduced (namely S.1980, S.1986, HR.2239) that mandate this requirement nationwide.

Kevin Shelley, California's secretary of state, has instituted stricter requirements for testing and auditing voting machine software as well.

The nation's three largest voting machine makers--ES&S, Diebold, and Sequoia Voting Systems--plan to offer paper-audit equipment; Sequoia's systems are ready now.

And e-voting companies are taking security concerns seriously. Six of them, along with the Information Technology Association of America, formed the Election Technology Council. The ETC plans to write an ethical code for e-voting companies, and to review security procedures.

Even e-voting's most ardent critics acknowledge that election fraud is at least as old as the Republic. They are working not to block adoption, they say, but to ensure that e-voting systems are secure and reliable, and allow for independent recounts. The ETC and forthcoming paper receipts should help serve that goal.


TOPICS: Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: computervoting; electronicvoting; votefraud

1 posted on 01/05/2004 1:45:05 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
When evotes are used, I'll register as a democrat and they'll be counted at least 5 times or more...... ;-)
2 posted on 01/05/2004 1:48:09 PM PST by b4its2late (Men are from earth. Women are from earth. Hillary's from hell. Deal with it.)
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To: All
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3 posted on 01/05/2004 1:49:48 PM PST by Support Free Republic (Happy New Year)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
Hanging bits?
Dangling bytes?
4 posted on 01/05/2004 1:51:43 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: billorites; b4its2late
Just found this

E-Voting Firm Falls Victim to Hacker

Suspect accessed corporate network and internal documents, VoteHere says.

Linda Rosencrance, Computerworld
Wednesday, December 31, 2003
The Chief Executive Officer of VoteHere, a developer of secure electronic voting technology confirmed this week that a hacker broke into its corporate network in October and accessed internal documents.


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Jim Adler, chief executive officer of the Bellevue, Washington-based firm, said the break-in may be related to a recent firestorm of concern over the security of online voting.

"Within 24 hours we identified who the individual was and where he lived and turned that info over to the FBI and cybercrime unit of Secret Service," Adler said.

"Over the subsequent two months we've been collecting evidence, and that is, by and large, complete."


Under Investigation
Because an investigation is under way, Adler declined to name the individual or comment more specifically on exactly what documents the hacker may have accessed.

Adler said the break-in didn't affect the integrity of VoteHere's technology.

He said he didn't know if the hacker copied the software's source code but said all of the source code, which had been patented, had already been released to security researchers for review.


5 posted on 01/05/2004 1:58:28 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (A little knowledge is dangerous.-- I live dangerously.)
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To: billorites

6 posted on 01/05/2004 2:01:13 PM PST by MineralMan (godless atheist)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
I predict e-ballots will produce more election corruption then the punch cad ever did.

The push card ballot was very difficult to defraud and is the reason the politicians want to get rid of it. Even counting chads never gave gore a plurality over Bush in Florida.
7 posted on 01/05/2004 3:27:53 PM PST by chainsaw
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To: chainsaw
I have to agree with you. The precincts where they are pushing this are the ones with the most questionable records too.
8 posted on 01/05/2004 3:29:07 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
I predict e-ballots will produce more election corruption then the punch cad ever did.

The punch card ballot was very difficult to defraud and is the reason the politicians want to get rid of it. Even counting chads never gave gore a plurality over Bush in Florida.
9 posted on 01/05/2004 3:31:52 PM PST by chainsaw
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