Presented for your viewing pleasure. A six page long and horribly damning article on the current state of e-voting security and incompetent coding.
Article
Bold is mine.
Performed flawlessly? How in the world do they know?
Personal opinion only, but if people are to have faith in the system then the coding should be open source and not proprietary. A voter verifiable hard copy of their vote should be displayed, maybe under glass, and then saved in the machine for possible recount if necessary.
edit to add...
Remember Windows is proprietary and not open source. Think of the flaws that have been found in that.
Article
Bold is mine.
To many e-voting critics, the Rubin report highlighted serious problems with federal certification processes and standards, which they say addressed the functionality of voting systems but not their security.
"If the Diebold system made it through the certification process, then the certification process is really broken," Rubin said. There was no reason to believe that systems made by other vendors were any more secure, he said.
In fact, in a certification report for the Diebold system that Doug Jones read in 1997, an unnamed certifier for Wyle Laboratories called the Diebold system, which was then called the I-Mark Electronic Ballot Station, the best of the lot. "This is the best voting system software we've ever seen," the certifier wrote.
Embarrassed by the Rubin report, Maryland commissioned its own audit of the Diebold system, hoping to dispel concerns about the machines. But that report confirmed that the machines were poorly programmed and "at high risk of compromise."
Six months later, Maryland officials hired a group of researchers from Raba Technologies -- some of whom were former employees of the National Security Agency -- to hack into the Diebold systems during a simulated election. Again, they confirmed what the Johns Hopkins researchers had found.
"We could have done anything we wanted to," said William Arbaugh, a University of Maryland assistant professor of computer science and one of the hackers. "We could change the ballots (before the election) or change the votes during the election." Amazingly, Diebold interpreted the Raba report as positive. Diebold President Bob Urosevich said in a statement that the report confirmed "the accuracy and security of ... our voting systems as they exist today."
Maryland officials seemed to agree. Despite three reports detailing serious security problems, election officials continued to support the voting machines and the vendor.
Linda Lamone, Maryland's chief election official, told reporters her confidence in the system was unshaken because it had passed "the one certification process that matters most -- an election. The system performed flawlessly and earned the trust of Maryland's election officials and voters."
Performed flawlessly? How in the world do they know?
Personal opinion only, but if people are to have faith in the system then the coding should be open source and not proprietary. A voter verifiable hard copy of their vote should be displayed, maybe under glass, and then saved in the machine for possible recount if necessary.
edit to add...
Remember Windows is proprietary and not open source. Think of the flaws that have been found in that.