Skip to comments.
Legislators Urge E-Voting Halt
http://www.wired.com/news/evote/0,2645,62627,00.html ^
Posted on 03/13/2004 7:21:01 AM PST by Andy_Stephenson
Edited on 06/29/2004 7:10:27 PM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
SACRAMENTO -- California legislators said on Thursday they want to stop the use of all paperless electronic voting machines in the state, fearing the same type of fiasco that plagued Florida in the 2000 election.
State Sens. Don Perata (D-Oakland) and Ross Johnson (R-Irvine), the chairman and vice chairman of the Senate election committee, sent a letter to Secretary of State Kevin Shelley urging him to decertify all paperless touch-screen voting machines before the general election.
(Excerpt) Read more at wired.com ...
TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: electronicvoting
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 next last
I think we owe a big ol heap of thanks to Jim March for this.
http://www.equalccw.com/voteprar.html
To: Andy_Stephenson
Hahahaha... The Kalifornia legislature doesn't think that its citizens are smart enough to e-vote !!!!
They're right !!!!
2
posted on
03/13/2004 7:29:10 AM PST
by
bearkat
(Cruel & unusual punishment works better.)
To: Andy_Stephenson
Amen. Computer voting is really a dumb idea. I like the system in place in our little town. You get a paper ballot, color in your choices and drop it in a locked box. Then the electon officials are the only ones with a key. It's not fail safe, but it beats anything else out there.
3
posted on
03/13/2004 7:30:25 AM PST
by
WVNan
To: Andy_Stephenson
Next to giving illegal aliens drivers licenses and thus the ability to vote and through Motor Voter registration, I can't think of a more dangerous threat to our democratic process than unverifiable electronic voting. This must be changed to provide a verifiable auditable paper trail.
4
posted on
03/13/2004 7:32:32 AM PST
by
rottndog
(woof)
To: rottndog
Not an "Audit Trail" call it what it is...a ballot. We must always speak in terms of a ballot.
To: bearkat
You may want to get up to speed on the dangers of paperless voting before you make blanket statements like that.
To: Andy_Stephenson
The 2000 fiasco in Florida was not because the ballots were "paperless". On the contrary, there was way too MUCH "paper" involved, in the form of the "hanging chads". The objection being raised is that it is much harder to insert a little vote fraud into the newer systems, and this does not bode well for future Democrat vote challenges. Because of the "secret ballot" in wide use in this country, in which it was made difficult to determine exactly which voter selected exactly which candidate, it became harder to apply individual pressure on the voter one way or the other. It also made it difficult to determine if a particular vote had been cast by a legitimate and authorized voter, or was a ballot box stuffer.
Electronic voting maintains the anonymity of the voter, while making it possible to declare a particular ballot either valid or void. You voted after you were assigned a particular number, and if you were ineligible, that vote number is automatically invalidated.
That is the part Democrats don't like.
To: alloysteel
Hanging chads was a ruse. If you don't ever clan a hole punch...what happens? Same thing with the punch card system. Johns Hopkins University found the punch card system more accurate than touchscreens.
To: alloysteel
What state and county do you live in?
Bet I can hack your system if you have Diebold or Sequoia...How can I...well both companies left their software on unprotected web sites and it is even now out in the wild for anyone to lean...including the attack points.
To: Andy_Stephenson
Hanging chads was a ruse. If you don't ever clan a hole punch...what happens? Same thing with the punch card system. Johns Hopkins University found the punch card system more accurate than touchscreens. The recounts in precincts that used paper and ink systems came off quickly, with a high degree of confidence and reliability. Better than punch card systems. Optical scanners can count these ballots quickly, and if the contest is close, a manual recount is much easier than a manual accounting of punched holes.
E-voting, be it touch-screen or other, will produce more uncertainty and doubt -- not good things in elections.
10
posted on
03/13/2004 7:47:01 AM PST
by
Cboldt
To: Andy_Stephenson
Great!
This runaway train has to be stopped.
To: Cboldt
"E-voting, be it touch-screen or other, will produce more uncertainty and doubt -- not good things in elections."
I concur...However...In my investigations over the last 2 years...I have discovered that optical scans can be as fraud prone as DRE's. It is not a technology problem...it is an audit problem. After all counting votes is accounting.
To: Madame Dufarge
I am trying to stop it. But we all have to band together to stop it. It is a double edge sword and it cuts both ways.
To: Madame Dufarge
I am trying to stop it. But we all have to band together to stop it. It is a double edge sword and it cuts both ways.
To: Andy_Stephenson
I have discovered that optical scans can be as fraud prone as DRE's. It is not a technology problem...it is an audit problem. After all counting votes is accounting. I'm not familiar with the acronym "DRE," and don't grasp what you mean by "not a technology problem."
My high opinion of ink/paper ballots may be misplaced. I admit and expect errors in the optical scan process, but when the contest is close, there is less interpretation of an ink/paper indication than of a hole-punch indication. That is, the audit is more reliable.
As for gross, outright fraud (adding a stack of punched ballots, or a stack of marked ballots, "voted" by one individual), all systems have weak points that require guarding.
15
posted on
03/13/2004 8:01:22 AM PST
by
Cboldt
To: bearkat
To: Cboldt
DRE stands for Direct Recording Electronic Recording or "Touch Screens". Paper ballots have their problems. But unlike the old days where you had to pay a lot of people off to rig an election now all it takes is 1 rogue programmer and a few lines of code that disappears when the machine is turned off.
To: Cboldt
""not a technology problem.""
What I mean is...getting rid of the paper ballot is likegetting rid of fireescapes because we have elevators. We need to beef up our Audit proceedures and getting rid of the record makes auditing impossible.
To: Andy_Stephenson
The California rats lost Prop 56 on a 3 to 1 margin. Blame it on the computer.
They loved it when it looked like they could stuff polling places with illegals. "Push that one. Now push that one. Good...here's your canned ham."
19
posted on
03/13/2004 8:11:11 AM PST
by
telebob
To: Andy_Stephenson
DRE stands for Direct Recording Electronic Recording or "Touch Screens". Paper ballots have their problems. But unlike the old days where you had to pay a lot of people off to rig an election now all it takes is 1 rogue programmer and a few lines of code that disappears when the machine is turned off. All balloting systems have "problems" of one sort or another. But I'm a firm beliver in the KISS principle, Keep It Simple, Stupid. Most people can handle paper and ink, and illiterate voters can obtain qualified assistance.
The DRE method lacks a means of audit that is sufficiently transparent and reliable to satisfy the voting public (if they bothered to peek behind the curtain), and I agree, set the stage for sham elections.
We aren't very far removed from third-world election practices, that is, adopting DRE, in conjunction with an efective ministry of propaganda (already in place) would facilitate the perpetration of sham elections in this country. It is possible, and will happen eventually if the people allow it.
20
posted on
03/13/2004 8:14:05 AM PST
by
Cboldt
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson