North Carolina May Redo State Election 44
goombah99 writes "The North Carolina Observer reports that due to failure of computerized voting system to properly record votes after its memory cards filled North Carolina may have to redo the November 2 statewide election. They believe 4400 votes were lost and from this have decided that only the State Ag commissioner race must be re-run. Still it's going to cost them a lot, indeed its going to cost them about the same price as 1000 new voting machines (3 million dollars) , or about $750 for every lost vote. Guess they wont be able to afford a paper trail system now."
I wonder... (Score:2)
There are few times that you get a "second chance". Wonder if they'll make the same mistake twice...
Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't worry. 17 people will show up, all relatives of one candidate or the other. I think they will find a way to get it done.
Ag Commissioner in NC --is-- an imporant race (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll gladly vote again.
Re:Ag Commissioner in NC --is-- an imporant race (Score:2)
Four years ago everything was going good for the State, Two months after taking office, Gov. Easly (D) annouced the State was nearly bankrupt. He has done a good job getting things under control. His predecessor(D) and the legislature (D controlled)were at fault. The scary thing is how those incumbant legislators keep getting re-elected after screwing things up like that. Some voters really are stupid.
If I ha
What's really important? (Score:2)
Grandparents' post shows a big problem: People don't care about local/state politics anymore. Let me tell you what: Ag Commissioner will MOST LIKELY affect NC residents moreso than who is Sec. of State, or Sec. of Defense, Sec of Education, et cetera.
Re:What's really important? (Score:2)
Vindicated (Score:4, Insightful)
We can use this as an example of just one of the many problems on Nov. 2, and if they end up doing a new election, how costly it is to make mistakes or use untrustworthy technologies in voting. Then segue to Florida and Ohio...
3 million sure would help OVC (Score:4, Informative)
OVC needs the support too (cash and serious programmers). Visit their web page [openvotingconsortium.org].
What kind of idiot engineer (Score:4, Insightful)
Does that REALLY have to be spelled out in the design document? (And was it?)
After RT "rest of the" FA... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:After RT "rest of the" FA... (Score:2)
And what's with voting machines that require memory configuration, anyway? I'm not sure I would ever buy such a machine if I were making the decision. With the number of volunteers that are responsible for operating these things, they shouldn't be any more complicated to set up than my iPod. And even that is probably too complicated, cons
Better (Score:2)
Better, it should stop after the last vote that it can save, rather than the first one that it can't.
Not rocket science. But, given that some precincts had these machines and others didn't, possibly election rigging.
-- MarkusQ
Re:After RT "rest of the" FA... (Score:2)
It never ceases to amaze me how many users accept this sort of excuse. Users shouldn't be so quick to accept the blame for badly designed user interfaces. Sure, we can't expect all users to be competent design engineers, but a large number of them should be smart enough to understand
I like honesty (Score:3, Insightful)
At least these guys can come out say what went wrong. Do we have any statement yet from Diebold or ES&S? Forgive me for asking, but how hard is it to count votes? This isn't the 80's anymore - hardware is cheap. I'm having a hard time figuring out why storage is apparently such an issue here. I can't remember the last time an ATM machine forgot/lost my PIN number. Powerball machines leave adequate paper trails. Come on.
Maybe the recounts in New Hampshire [votenader.org] and Ohio [votecobb.org] will shed some light on the issue.
What effect will this have? (Score:2, Insightful)
Anybody wanna take a guess at which of these outcomes is vastly more likely than the other?
If I were North Carolina (Score:3, Interesting)
Does the manufacturer really have no responsibility for these costs at all? $3 million is a friggin' lot of money for tax payers to spend for something UniLect screwed up.
This blows my mind. Yes, an error message "sort of" pops up in among all the other commands. And here I am worried that I'd better make it super-obvious when an error might cause a score to be lost in an educational training drill. AARGH!
From the article:
The counter hit 3,016 before the warning message came up. It went on and off, as Sanderson worked the control panel to accept more votes. If the machine worked during early voting as it did on Tuesday, the message could have appeared hundreds, if not thousands, of times.
But county elections workers said the message was hard to see. Sanderson said a precinct worker could easily miss it while setting the machines.
L.E. Pond, chairman of the local elections board, was ready with pages copied from the UniLect instruction manual. The warning appears mixed in with other commands, he said, with no explanation of what to do if it pops up.
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
That's not the greatest example, since they were using the machine as instructed. It's more like if your Isuzu had no gas gauge, but a little gray light that would *occasionally* blink on and off again when you got down near empty, and when you hit empty the engine would fall out.
One can argue that you should have known that would happen (it was in the instruction manual!), but it's also a bla
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
Lets assume that there will be 10,000 people voting on your machine for (at most) 100 offices or local issues. A simple bit vector approach would be 100 x 10,000 = 1 Mb. Of course, we need to allow for memory requirements for the GUI and related programs, but having these things "run out" of memory is ridiculous.
The only way I can see that memory is a problem is if they are storing each record in
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
Even if they "needed" more memory, I'm sure the citizens of NC would much rather their elections department sprang for the 64 MB model instead of having to pay $3,000,000 to do the election over again.
Even then, these things should be writing to the flash cards after EVERY vote. Marxist Hacker 42 [slashdot.org] noted there is no need to keep ~3,000 votes in RAM.
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
They don't have a choice about redoing the election. The only choice they have is whether to spend the money to upgrade the machines. They might prefer to retrain the poll workers.
And I agree, they should backup the ram after every vote.
Re:If I were North Carolina (Score:2)
My guess is that the 3,000-vote model doesn't actually have any less storage space - it's just configured not to use the full amount of available space.
Media forbidden from reporting on this (Score:1, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Media forbidden from reporting on this (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Media forbidden from reporting on this (Score:1)
Re:Media forbidden from reporting on this (Score:1)
Please try to keep up, despite nearly half the country voting against him, Bush clearly has a "mandate" and much political capital to spend.
Re:Media forbidden from reporting on this (Score:2)
I'm waiting for florida... (Score:3, Interesting)
After Bev Harris [blackboxvoting.org] catching the elections officials red-handed disposing of ballots, poll-logs, and other interesting documents on Tuesday, I suspect things may get interesting down there as well. Even more interesting, it's the same people who had -16K votes for Gore in 2000.
Who knows, it may even make the newspapers someday.
-- MarkusQ
Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
How odd. Someone modded the parent post "overrated" even though it (at this point) hasn't had any other moderation.
I suspect who ever did it didn't bother reading the linked article (which details the events to which I refered). In short, they went to pick up copies of the records to which they were granted under their Freedom Of Information Act request. They were instead given newly generated records (the printer had date stampted them). They pointed this out, and were told they would have to come ba
UniLect PATRIOT? (Score:1, Flamebait)
A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:2)
If the voting machine spits out a piece of paper the voter gives to some random person, does that make the voting process any more secure? The paper doesn't identify them, but they could look at the piece of paper and know what they punched and somehow find voter fraud? Then, they can feel safe that this piece of paper won't change, and the random person will put the paper with no hanging chads in the ball
Re:A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because what is being mesaured is the voter's intent. Paper as an audit mechanism would confirm to the voter that his intent was properly recorded, at least for puroposes of auditing.
If the voting machine spits out a piece of paper the voter gives to some random person, does that make the voting process any more secure?
yes.
The paper doesn't identify them, but they could look at the piece of paper and
Re:A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:2)
Ever since my kid (who is usually in the 99 percentile) got a 0 on a standardized test, I've been leery of opscan systems.
Optical scan can screw up if the voter doesn't mark the ballot properly, it seems about as difficult as punching a hole properly. At least in Georgia the standard was whether or not light came through the hole, so pregant chad wouldn't have been a problem to count.
My favorite system is to use the e-ter
Re:A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:1)
Currently, without a paper trail, voters must trust the machine to record their vote correctly. The machine could swear up and down that it recorded your vote for candidate X, but how do you know it didn't (accidentally or maliciously) secretly cast it for candidate Y? The vote is recorded on a memory card that the voter cannot view personally. And even if they could, they probably wouldn't understand whic
Re:A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:1)
Re:A bunch of nerds demand . . .Paper? (Score:1)
But this audit trail will only tell us the total number of votes, not the number cast for each individual candidate. This is an inadequate audit trail because it will fail to catch cases where one candidate's votes are increased by the same number another candidate's votes are decremented. And even when it does manage to catch a problem where the vote total recorded by the machine does no
how about a LOCAL do-over? (Score:1)
If you know who the 3000-odd people who voted first are, simply invite the 4000-odd people whose votes didn't count to re-vote.
If you don't knoow, take them away from the total and invite all 7000-odd people to re-vote.
If you didn't vote on Nov. 2, or your vote isn't one of the ones that was lost or one of the unlucky 3000, you can't vote the 2nd time.
It's a lot cheaper.
The only downside is that people will
Oh Goody, a Redo! (Score:2)
Washington State [thenewstribune.com] is having a similar problem with its Governors Race. Less than 300 votes separate the candidates.
The final system will one day be: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)
Voting Machine TCO (Score:2)