U.S. To Certify Labs For Testing E-Voting Machines 75
InternetVoting writes "In a clear counter to the recent criticisms of secrecy involving Ciber labs the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued recommendations (pdf) to the Election Assistance Commission (EAC). NIST recommends the accreditation of two labs, iBeta Quality Assurance and SysTest Labs. The recommendation, emphasizing the need for transparency, includes on-site assessment reports, lab responses, and on-site reviews for each lab. These reports shed much needed light into the process of voting machine certification. Learn more from the Q&As About NIST Evaluation of Laboratories that Test Voting Systems."
Opaque Audits (Score:5, Insightful)
It sounded, prima facie, like progress was being made; but quoth TFA:
Call me cynical, but auditing opaque processes with equally opaque tests doesn't change much; I foresee a holographic sticker labelled “certified.”
I'd wager, furthermore, they expect us to buy it at face value.
Re:Opaque Audits (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Opaque Audits (Score:5, Insightful)
I think you're being too soft on your own government. Government isn't a child in need of coddling: it's a cynical and self-aware machine that studies to persist at your expense.
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I think you're confusing the government with those who abuse it (whatever party is in power).
The government at times resembles a half-wit child with a gun.
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Hmm; I guess that's the converse of “hate the sin, love the sinner.” Realistically speaking, however, the will to power is so congenitally irresistable that differentiating between government and the abuse thereof is academic.
No: government and its abuse are selfsame (or can be modeled as such with reasonable success).
Re:Opaque Audits (Score:5, Insightful)
When you think about it, the lack of standards is probably what has caused the current crop of voting machines to be such dismal failures. While I'm not sure I trust Diebold anyway, given their political connections, they probably would have done at least a halfway decent job on their machines if there were a set of standards to measure them against. It's not enough for the US Government to send out a Request For Proposals outlining what they are looking for, unless the functionality and security can be defined against some kind of standard. If the standards had existed first, maybe the machines would not have all the loopholes and omissions which make them such trash currently.
Re:Opaque Audits (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Opaque Audits (Score:5, Funny)
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going back in time (Score:2, Insightful)
you can't do it (Score:1)
We had a long established precedent that any citizen worth enough to vote could verify an empty box using nothing more than a set of mark I eyeballs. No programming needed, no electricity needed for that matter.
I don't care how many standards and computers and voodoo assurances you throw at it, computerised voting doesn't pass that minimal "normal human eyeballs" test. I don't care if the code is open or not, even if it is they can still hack it ups
Once that's done.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Once that's done.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I know you're trying to be funny but every state has requirements for people who want to run for office. So long as they meet those requirements, anyone can get on the ballot.
However, some states, such as Pennsylvania, have stacked the odds against third party candidates by requiring those candidates to meet higher standards. In Pennsylvania, if you are third party candidate and want to be on the ballot in November (you can't be on the ballot in May), you would need to gather signatures equal to or greater than 2% of the ballots cast for the largest vote-getter in the last statewide election race.
In the most recent election, third party candidates would have needed 67,070 valid signatures to be on the ballot as the highest vote count in the last statewide election was 3.4 million.
Contrast that with the 2,000 signatures that either a Democratic or Republican candidate must gather.
Obviously the answer is to have the legislature change the reqirement but the vast majority of the unwashed masses don't know about the requirement, don't care about the requirement, and are happy enough simply voting straight ticket.
Besides, can you imagine what would happen if it were easier for third party candidates to get on the ballot? Why, there would be competition and choice during an election! We can't have that, now can we?
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To stand for election, a candidate must submit a nomination paper signed by ten electors* for the constituency and lodge a deposit of £500, which is refundable only if the candidate receives more than 5% of the total votes cast for each candidate at the election.
* electors meaning members of the electorate, ie. general eligible public (for that constituency)
Advances in technology for voting (Score:2)
i like the way i vote now (Score:1)
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Doesn't matter if the standards are the same... (Score:4, Interesting)
If it's the latter, then as long as the standards anywhere close to where they have been, we'll continue working with virtually whatever the voting machine companies assert is good.
Ryan Fenton
Why is it (Score:5, Insightful)
That politicians can't grasp the immediately obvious? Why do they even bother with electronic voting machines when:
How could any politician come to a conclusion that electronic voting machines make sense? There is no compelling reason to use electronic voting machines at all. The only possible explanation I see is that counties which bought electronic voting machines had county officials on the payroll of the voting machine makers.
The fact that they've been purchased seems to suggest that politics is already not quite as transparent as it should be.
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The "scandal" around the 2000 election opened the door - "hanging chads", people whinging that they were confused and *might* have voted for someone by accident because the inanimate ballots are to blame, overseas armed forces ballots getting lost, state attorney generals getting involved, the supreme court deciding the election, etc. The gene
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There are two compelling reasons for EVMs. The most important is that the blind can vote without assistance (preserving the secret ballot). The second is to simplify ballot format: no more will we have the creative "butterfly" ballot (an attempt to squeeze more candidates into a given page space by alternating names on either side of the central "punch" area), which on its own may have swung the 2000 election. Did you know that Pat Buchanan received more votes in Palm Beach County (well-known as a haven for
Blind Votes (Score:2)
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I think you are confusing the /. crowd with the 'normal' mom & pop crowd. For the non-technical people it is much easier to press a box with the person's name (which then changes color) that poke a hole in a card.
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I have an amazing piece of technology I'd like to suggest that makes hole punching absolutely obsolete: the Sharpie Brand Permanent Marker.
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It's even simpler to place a cross in a box on a piece of paper/card.
Why do they even bother? (Score:3, Informative)
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I don't think people do want them, You tell people.. "Hea lets spend billions for a voting system that does no better job than the current one and has no paper trail.. but you get to know who wins instantly.. right after the lawsuits are finished that is."
Politicians want to push these over on people and they will, "they will get use to them over time.. muhahaha!"
All we need is to convert counties using wierd systems to a system where we use our number 2 pencils to fill in the dot on a paper ballot. The bal
Recommendations? (Score:1)
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All joking aside, there needs to be a law that does protect the integrity of the voting process. But I believe we have these. It gets to be a problem though when you try to prove that somebody tampered with the electoral process. How do you show something was an intentional security backdoor, versus just a programming error? You can right specs and standards for this stuff, but specs have ambiguity, there are diff
Watchmen (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm waiting for the day when... (Score:4, Funny)
some hacker group gets Mickey Mouse elected via electronic voting machines. I'm wondering if even then people will pay attention.
Re:I'm waiting for the day when... (Score:5, Funny)
I thought so.
Bah! (Score:2)
Bah! Goofy has a far better chance at the presidency. Now there's a complete fool I could respect!
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Hmm. Some interesting possibilities. Thinking about the future, imagine what it would cost to put President Mouse's picture on currency. Would Disney license that use, and would the guv have to pay royalties for each bill/coin in circulation?
And there's also the argument that we already have a mickey-mouse president.....
whats wrong with this picture? (Score:4, Insightful)
"If god had wanted us to vote, he would have given us candidates"
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The certification of voting machines is not new. There have been federal requirements that electronic voting machines' software be "third party certified" for some time now. The new phenomenon is certifying the certifiers. Previously you coul
if you ask me.... (Score:1)
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And any vote that's not secret can be coerced. Heard any news lately about the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pushing for legislation to make votes to form a union non-secret?
Admittedly, in this country, it's hard to believe there could be wide-spread voter tampering, but vote-buying could still occur. For example, a company president could offers election day as a paid holiday (or just a monetary bonus) if the employee brings in his or her ballot indicating a vote for X? Or something more sinister: offer a paid
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See also, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Committee_on_Un -American_Activities [wikipedia.org] and
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How hard is it to design ballot boxes with a tamper resistent tracking device and to have cameras watching when the ballot papers go in and when the boxes are opened to count the votes?
Redundant? (Score:1)
Earlier today, someone complained of the same thing but I'll be damned if I can find it; not that it really matters.
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The parent was posted as a 'Reply' to and earlier post I submitted [slashdot.org]. I can't imagine how it became a new thread. I wonder what will happen to this post?
Just another money grab (Score:1)
What is the likelihood that this group would be able to satisfy everyone and have enough power to keep elections from being rigged?
Voting Computers (Score:2, Insightful)
More crap like NIAP? (Score:5, Interesting)
Nothing wrong with NIAP itself (Score:2)
Protection Profiles are written by the organizations using NIST standards. If Microsoft (for example) chose create a really, really lame Protection Profile for their ToE (Target of Evaluation, in MS's case several of their flagship OSes), that's their crap/deception, not NIST's. A lame PP would be one that states the system will never be connected to a network, is protected from physical access, never has unsigned code running on
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Rainbow Books WTF!
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For example, when conducting pen tests I've personally had to battle the
Maybe someone could help me understand... (Score:1)
This is all a bunch of media-spin garbage to get people to buy into blackbox voting, which (and I apologize for my arrogance) anyone with half a brain should see, is a horrible idea.
As far as me and my tax dollars are concerned, all voting software should be open, methods transparent and certificatio
1 for you, 2 for me! (Score:1)
The fair voting system favors the winner.
I mean, the fair voting system disfavors the loser.
LET'S HANG CHAD AGAIN!