[lit-ideas] Re: voting

  • From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2004 17:28:00 EDT

And I thought elections were a mess before....this is the most convoluted  
screwed up thing I think I've ever read.  Sad thing is, so much is riding  on 
it.  I think I'm going to hit that fountain of wine and go to bed.  
 
Julie Krueger
wishing indeed she hadn't asked (question:  who first said "ignorance  is 
bliss?")
========Original  Message========     Subj: [lit-ideas] Re: voting  Date: 
10/18/04 4:16:16 PM Central Daylight Time  From: 
_judithevans001@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
(mailto:judithevans001@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)   To: _lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
(mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    
Monday, October 18, 2004, 8:36:08 PM,  JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx wrote:

Jac> Someone explain to me why people in  Florida are voting for President  
today.


You may wish you hadn't  asked.... BTW the voter verification machines
have gone wrong already (Miami  Herald)


>Welcome to Wired News.

>Florida a Big Test of  E-Voting


>By Jacob Ogles  |   Also by this  reporter  Page 1 of 1

>02:00 AM Aug. 16, 2004  PT

>ORLANDO, Florida -- Florida election officials will be relying  on
>touch-screen machines to provide the sole storage of early  voting
>data between now and the state's Aug. 31 primary election  day,
>raising concerns that votes sitting in storage for two weeks could  be
>susceptible to tampering.

>Florida law allows voters who  can't make it to the polls on election
>day to cast "convenience votes" up  to 15 days before the election. So
>beginning Monday, the state will open  hundreds of locations where
>voters can cast early ballots for the  statewide primary. But to
>ensure that early voting doesn't sway election  outcomes, state law
>forbids officials from tabulating any votes until the  polls close on
>Aug. 31.

> Counties using optically scanned  paper ballots will store the
> ballots in locked iron boxes for two weeks.  But 15 counties that use
> touch-screen machines for early voting will  store the votes on the
> machines.

>The machines are being  relied upon even as criticism mounts about
>e-voting nationwide.  Discussions of tampering and security have been
>the subject of numerous  reports by academic institutions such as
>Johns Hopkins University and  private entities like Raba Technologies.
>An Associated Press poll of  Florida voters recently showed that less
>than half of respondents were  "very confident" their vote for
>president would be correctly counted, and  that only one in five
>respondents was "very confident" in the voting  machines.

>In light of the criticism, voter activists in the state  are
>disappointed that election officials don't feel a need to back  up
>votes cast through early voting. "It doesn't sound smart to me,"  said
>Sandy Wayman, legislative chairman for the Miami-Dade Election  Reform
>Coalition.

>But at this point, election officials who  have opted to use
>touch-screen technology have little choice about  backing up data.
>State law forbids any examination of ballots until the  conclusion of
>an election.

>"The alternative is the development  of software that would allow the
>extraction of ballot data without  inspection, but electronic voting
>is still an eccentric institution,"  said Douglas Jones, as associate
>professor of computer science at the  University of Iowa. "It's still
>not really on the map as far as writing  laws goes."

>Generally, election officials print out a zero-report  from each
>machine at the start of an election day to show that no votes  were
>cast on a machine before an election. But since voting for  the
>Florida primary will run essentially for 15 days, officials can  do
>this only on the first day of voting, since votes from each day  will
>remain on the machines for two weeks. For every day that follows  the
>first day, election officials will have to confirm each morning  that
>the number of votes on machines matches the number of votes that  were
>on the machines at the end of voting the night before.

>In  Miami-Dade County, where e-voting recently came under severe
>scrutiny  when back-up files of the 2002 election went missing, armed
>guards will  be on round-the-clock duty at each of 14 major voting
>locations to  prevent anyone from tampering with the primary votes.

>"Most of these  locations have guards most of the day, but we will
>supplement the cost  and provide security (where) there are not
>normally guards scheduled,"  said Seth Kaplan, spokesman for the
>Miami-Dade County Elections  Department.

>But in some counties, the votes will simply be kept under  lock and
>key. Some election supervisors plan to remove electronic ballots  that
>plug into the machines and store them in a different location  than
>the touch-screen machines so that no one could add votes to  the
>machine. Other officials, however, plan to leave the ballots in  the
>machines.

>In Charlotte County, officials will store the  machines in vaults at
>the county's two voting locations. In Martin  County, officials will
>put the machines in vaults and the electronic  ballots in separate
>locked cabinets.

>But Lake County plans to  store the machines and ballots together
>behind locked doors at public  libraries. Placing voter convenience
>over voting security, officials  there plan to rotate the machines
>through different polling locations  every few days on a pre-announced
>itinerary.

>Election  officials say there is little risk of vote tampering because
>each machine  records three copies of votes in different places on the
>machine for  redundancy. Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections
>Theresa LePore, who  became the butt of national criticism during the
>2000 election for the  infamous butterfly design, said every election
>official in the state will  be devoting unprecedented resources toward
>ensuring a fair vote. In her  county, all functions on the machines
>that would delete votes have been  physically cut off.

>But critics of the technology are uncomfortable  with the lack of
>physical back-up, much less a digital copy of the  votes.

>Jones recently inspected the machines in Miami-Dade County to  ensure
>they were ready for early voting. He said the greatest threats to  the
>process, such as theft, are just as germane to paper voting  as
>e-voting, but the new technology does come with its own  problems.

>While those counties using paper ballots can transport the  votes to a
>secure location regularly, the only way to do the same  with
>touch-screen technology would be to have new personal  electronic
>ballots put in the machines every day. "The economics of that  would
>be very bad," he said.

>Eleven Florida counties are using  iVotronic machines, produced by
>Election Systems and Software. Four other  counties, including
>Hillsborough and Palm Beach, use Sequoia Voting  Systems.

>LePore said the machinery is still better than the  troublesome
>punchcard ballots used by most counties in 2000. She also  defended
>the early voting as a way of increasing voter  participation.

>Anything that is of assistance in letting people vote  is good, she
>said. "Hopefully things will work well, just like we hope  they will
>on election day."






-- 
Judy Evans,  Cardiff, UK    
mailto:judithevans001@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx


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