| An open letter to Sec. Galvin: Registering my worry about Diebold voting machines |
[Nov. 1st, 2006|08:14 am] |
This is what I emailed to elections@sec.state.ma.us -- I'm not sure that that is the right email address to use, so we'll see/
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I'm a resident of Melrose, and I have heard that Sec. Galvin is considering using Diebold voting machines on a trial basis in a few districts on Nov. 7th, with an eye to a larger use in the future.
I am extremely uncomfortable with this.
The more we find out about Diebold voting machines, the more clear it becomes that they are not designed appropriately for such an important task.
As a matter of fact, although it sounds paranoid, I'm starting to suspect that they are actually deliberately designed to be "hackable".
They have many features that look good on paper, but, really, don't add any security.
One example of this is that the box they're in locks, because you obviously need to give some physical security. And that looks good on paper.
But the lock they use is a standardized lock that you use on, for instance, hotel mini-bars, and all the keys are interchangeable. So you can go to a hotel, take the mini-bar key, and unlock any Diebold voting machine.
Their computerized security is basically the same, although it's more technical and therefore harder to understand. But the machine is like that all the way through, from stem to stern, so much so that I can't help but wonder if it was designed to be like that.
And now the Miami Herald is reporting that, in early voting from Florida, there are a number of cases where people are trying to vote for Democrats and it is registering Republican.
In order for there to be a serious problem, you need two things: a system that can be dishonestly manipulated, and dishonest people to manipulate it.
I am frankly not too worried that we have that many dishonest people in charge of elections in Massachusetts, so I don't anticipate problems. But, still -- I think that elections are too important to even have the possibility of fraud. And the Diebold system seems to be deliberately designed to allow fraud.
I think that we in Massachusetts deserve a system of which we can be confident, a system that is resistant to fraud. Our paper ballots with little ovals that we fill in with marker is fraud-resistant, easy to use, simple, and robust. Touch-screen voting has many more things that can go wrong, as is always the case with computers. As you can tell from the fact that I'm emailing, I'm not against computers in principle -- I was a computer science major in college. I didn't do very well, but I am still friends with everyone I met then -- and all the professional computer programmers I know are deeply against Diebold touch-screen voting.
The more that someone knows about computers, the less confident they are with the Diebold machines. They are too aware of how much can go wrong.
So I urge the Secretary to give up the plan to use Diebold machines. Even if nothing goes wrong with the voting, I couldn't feel confident that the votes actually reflected the will of the voters. The problems with Diebold are so pervasive that I deeply feel that they should not be used in Massachusetts, at least not until the system is entirely redesigned to include true, robust, and trustworthy security.
Thank you for your time;
- Ian Osmond 960 Main Street Melrose, Massachusetts
cc: http://xiphias.livejournal.com |
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| (no subject) |
[Nov. 1st, 2006|10:43 am] |
What do people know about Professor Michael Ian Shamos? I was just talking to Sec. Galvin's office, and they mentioned that Prof. Shamos is involved in their oversight and testing procedure. Looking up his papers, I see that he's got a lot of publications and experience with electronic voting and oversight, but, reading one of his papers, it seems. . . well, his writing doesn't really inspire me with confidence.
http://euro.ecom.cmu.edu/people/faculty/mshamos/paper.htm
That's one of his papers. His arguments are things like, "Well, China manages to steal elections even without electronic voting, so why should we be worried about people stealing elections WITH electronic voting?" |
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