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Trust in Voting Machines
Editorial, Washington Post
December 22, 2003
EVEN THOUGH experts continue to raise questions about the vulnerability
of touch-screen voting systems to fraud and computer glitches, Maryland
election officials seem determined to press a flawed plan to adopt
them. The state is buying into a system that has come under increasing
scrutiny since July, when researchers from the Information Security
Institute at Johns Hopkins University cited numerous vulnerabilities
in touch-screen technology. They determined that, among other shortcomings,
the computer code in the voting machines made by Diebold Elections
Systems was anything but hacker-proof; that an outsider could tamper
with the program, and the tampering would be difficult to detect.
That was the first red flag, enough to prompt Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich
Jr. (R) to order a review by Science Applications International
Corp., which also concluded that the system was "at high risk
of compromise." Then, last month, computer scientist Aviel
D. Rubin of the Johns Hopkins team reiterated his criticism, telling
the state House Ways and Means Committee that a computer programmer
could switch 10 percent of the votes from one candidate to another
and leave no traces.
As if this weren't enough to generate uneasiness, Diebold's chief
executive, an active Republican fundraiser, has been quoted as saying
he is committed to "helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes"
to President Bush next year. Then there's the report of an e-mail
found in files apparently stolen from the firm that recommended
charging Maryland "out the yin-yang" if the state were
to ask that machines be equipped to produce paper printouts that
can be verified by the voters.
Maryland ought to be able to negotiate a fair price for the cost
of adding printers, and paper records ought to be a requirement,
regardless of which company does the job. In California, the secretary
of state has announced that all electronic voting machines must
include paper printouts by 2006. Maryland Del. Karen S. Montgomery
(D-Montgomery) has drafted legislation that would require voter-verified
paper records. Voters would be allowed to correct errors they find
on the printouts of their votes. The bill also would require random
checks of the paper records in 2 percent of election precincts against
the computer records, to search for possible tampering.
Before committing itself to a suspect system, Maryland at the least
should insist on the kinds of protection sought by Ms. Montgomery.
Mr. Ehrlich should join in putting these safeguards on the books
and in conducting a further review of the arrangement with Diebold.
© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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Take Action Today to Make Sure Your Vote Counts!
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Breaking News
• Sept. 23, 2004 'A Massive Experiment' in Voting in The Washington Post
• Sept. 20, 2004 The Magic Voting Touch, an Editorial in The Washington Post
• Aug. 27, 2004 After Your Vote Vanishes, an Editorial in The Washington Post
• Aug. 26, 2004 Voting machine safeguards in question in The Baltimore Sun
• Aug. 25, 2004 Md. Machines Seek Vote of Confidence in The Washington Post
• How
They Could Steal The Election This Time: The Nation Magazine's exhaustive
examination of the potential problems with DRE voting systems, including Diebold in Maryland
• The Washington Post on TrueVote MD!
• Blackwell Halts Deployment of Diebold Voting Machines for 2004
• Gov. Ehrlich appoints new member
to election board
• E-voting regulators often join other
side when leaving office
• Women Voters Drop Paperless Vote Support
• The Disability Lobby and Voting
New York Times editorial
•Scans of the Hack the
Vote article
from the April issue of Vanity Fair magazine.
•Think You Voted in Maryland? Think Again
• Takoma Park
supports legislation to require modifications to new voting machines
purchased by the State of Maryland to create a verifiable paper trail
• Diebold "basically
had no interest in putting actual security in this system," said
Paul Franceus, one of the consultants. "It's not like they did
it wrong. It's like they didn't bother."
• MD Senate report finds security
risks, recommends paper
• Diebold gives paper
trail for FREE to San Diego County!!
More news.
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