Diebold Rebrands What No One Wants 175
Irvu writes "Diebold has apparently failed in their bid to sell their tainted elections systems unit. Unable to find a buyer the CEO of Diebold promised that the system will be run more 'openly and independently.' To prove that they are serious, they renamed it. Diebold Election Systems is now Premiere Election Solutions. They still sell GEMS, AccuVote OS and the ever-unpopular AccuVote-TSX which performed so disastrously in California's Top-to-Bottom Review under the same names. Apparently their rebranding effort only goes so far."
Stick with paper (Score:5, Funny)
old voting systems
[X] paper
bold voting systems
[ ] electronic
There are no old bold voting systems.
DIE bold.
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What about the Van Eck method of monitoring the voting results?
Emanation monitoring could lead to some interesting early results!
Yeah!
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old voting systems
[X] paper
bold voting systems
[X] electronic
There are no old bold voting systems.
You obviously have never been to Florida - just proved you wrong there... And that is the problem with a pure paper system. I'm all for using a GUI for the input validation, and paper for the count...
True to their name (Score:2, Funny)
Why can't they have the people who make there ATMs (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why can't they have the people who make there A (Score:5, Insightful)
When your voting system gets scammed: You lose your rights.
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They're looking at a different market. (Score:5, Insightful)
With an election, if you get the number wrong, you have a politician who will be your friend for life.
Think about it. They can handle billions of dollars, but they can't keep a million votes straight? At some point you realize that it isn't incompetence. It's their goal.
Re:They're looking at a different market. (Score:4, Insightful)
The millions of votes are supposed to be secret, anonymous, and unique.
Tell me you don't see a difference with a straight face.
(And hey: if you want to believe that every electronic election is rigged, no matter how eventually open source, now matter how eventualy trackable by paper-trail, etc., be my guest. Keep in mind that most of the electronic voting solutions were the result of the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which was supposed to address the alleged and/or real problems and unfairness of 2000...)
Re:They're looking at a different market. (Score:5, Insightful)
You do realize that none of those terms describes the Diebold system, right?
You say that as if federal legislation could never lead to horrible, unforeseen consequences.
Re:They're looking at a different market. (Score:5, Insightful)
Open source? Sure - but how do I know that the machine is actually running the code I reviewed? Trackable by paper trail? Good, but you need to: 1) let the voters check their part of the paper trail 2) have someone check the paper trail with the electronic record. If you believe that this is not effectively doubling the traditional ballot, then be my guest.
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I'm fifty-ish with 20yrs in software development for med-large systems and I seriously don't know what was wrong with manual counting in the first place. Was it too much effort? Too slow? Too much healthy competion and transparency? And as an Aussie I have to ask, why Tuesday?
Re:They're looking at a different market. (Score:4, Funny)
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Not that easy (Score:4, Interesting)
Second, an ATM is, by and large, just a slightly more secure terminal to the bank's central computers. It's not the ATM that authorizes your transaction, or transfers the money. It's just a terminal that's networked with a central system. So it's slightly easier to get things right.
With voting machines, the whole assumption that it must be anonymous, plus the bigger distrust of a single central station that counts everything, screw that assumption up big time. You can't go and transmit "Moraelin voted for the German Anarchistic Pogo Party" (I didn't, but for an easily rememberable example sake) over to other computers.
Third, the various kinds of bank terminals get numbers wrong more often than you'd think. E.g., the Deutsche Bank fairly recently introduced OCR machines where you can just shove the check in and have it read, so you don't have to type it all. Well, one of the damn machines didn't read the decimal point, so I ended up transferring 100 years worth of fee to my insurance.
The bank will help you solve such problems, but never claimed that it's 100% bullet-proof and more infallible than the pope.
Fourth, banks (if their central software is anywhere near well written) have other checks and safeguards.
E.g., every cent transferred must be a cent that comes from somewhere else. Even if someone maliciously manipulated the software or the database, you have a chance to catch it. If at the end of the month you do the totals and you have money that appeared out of nowhere, or disappeared into nowhere, you can start an investigation.
Plus it can catch erroneous transfers in the first place. For example my erroneous money transfer should have bounced from the start because most sane people don't have that kind of money in their personal day-to-day account.
E.g., similarly all the money moves must be accompanied by an entry in the transaction table. If someone's account grew by a million, but the transactions to that account don't add up to +1,000,000$, you can call the cops.
E.g., you can have other triggers, regardless of whether the transaction is correct or not.
For example, any incoming money transfer over, say, 10,000$ will automatically trigger an investigation. Ditto if someone suddenly starts getting lots and lots of little transactions. That's mostly against money laundering, but would also catch any error where a bunch of money appears out of nowhere.
For example, you can have bogus rows in the accounts table, which normally have no reason to be accessed, and are booby-trapped with a trigger. If some DBA comes with such ideas as "I know, let's shave a cent out of each account and add it to mine" or "I know, let's export the names and credit card numbers and sell them to scammers", chances are he'd stumble over such traps. Plus, it would trigger an investigation when a bunch of credit card numbers assigned to such bogus accounts start appearing in transactions.
Etc.
All this simply doesn't apply to votes.
- You don't have to take a vote from somewhere else to assign a vote to Moraelin, like would be the case with money
- You don't have people checking their balance and asking you to fix the errors. The whole idea of anonymity is that you shouldn't store anywhere stuff like "Moraelin voted for the German Anarchistic Pogo Party". If I can check "wait, did you count my vote for the German Anarchistic Pogo Party?" a month later, then so can someone else. That's another bank safeguard that just doesn't exist.
- you can't really use any sums as triggers, because everyone gets the same number: 1 vote. Each transaction says exactly the same: "1 vote for party X". So you can't go and say "whoa, we'll investigate all transactions over 10,000".
- since it's anonymous, you can't check how many transactions each person has, either
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Well, actually there's no part of the constitution that requires this. Votes are currently anonymous only to protect the voter from scrutiny at the time of casting the vote, or shortly after, by peers, community members, and other influences (even spouses). As long as the general public has no access to this data then this idea can be protected. There's no reason that the vote can't still be tied to a person. Congress does this every
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Just saying that it's a harder problem. Not necessarily impossible, mind you. Just harder.
And that the challenges are different, so the expertise doesn't carry over 1-to-1. Having half a century of experience in making secure ATMs, doesn't make one automatically an expert on secure voting machines.
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Spoken like a true liberal lemming.
Wait, aren't lemmings the ones that walk off cliffs without looking, just trusting that everything is gonna work out alright? Isn't that kinda the polar opposite of what the GP is talking about?
Of course it is, you're just another AC troll who thinks they are cute.. Heh, "liberal lemming", that's almost creative. Almost.
I think people who just keep on going with the flow, telling themselves "hey, the people up front know what they are doing, just keep moving along" are more like lemmings. I think anyon
Re:Why can't they have the people who make there A (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why can't they have the people who make there A (Score:2)
With ATMs, both sides of the transaction get to audit it to make sure that they aren't getting ripped off. With voting, no party gets to audit. If anyone could audit that your vote was cast correctly, then they could also buy votes and audit that the vote was cast as bought, or you boss could just audit that you voted the way that he told you to, or the gang down the street could audit that you voted how they told you to... etc.
An ATM is a much simpler problem because it i
Auditing votes (Score:2)
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No, that's not good enough—even you shouldn't be able to prove you voted a certain way unless the ballot itself is checked. Otherwise the person to whom you sold your vote/who bullied your vote out of you can just ask for your encrypted vote code.
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You could set it up so that it took two keys to decrypt, your own and the auditor's. You wouldn't be able to reveal your vote to an extortionist, only to the auditor.
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This way, you can verify your vote with the real decryption key, and if your vote has been coerced or sold you can show that person what they want to see.
Re:Why can't they have the people who make there A (Score:4, Interesting)
Independent review (of the leaked source code) concluded that the code base was of shockingly low quality, lacking in many basic principles of secure and defensive design, most likely written by programmers with very little training. Unfortunately this didn't stop it from being election-ready certified, which I imagine is where the real value was for Diebold.
Unfortunately, as any decent coder knows, a huge mess of spaghetti code is nearly impossible to fix short of a complete rewrite, which is probably why the system hasn't gotten any better since then.
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who says ATMs are all that great? (Score:3, Insightful)
The elections machines have been subjected to numerous public tests, the results of which are available to everyone. The ATMs have not. We are told that the ATMs are dependable and secure, but I don't think we really know and I haven't seen much from the banking industry that implies that they are somehow all that much more sophisticated computer security wise than anyone else.
I believe the main reason that ATMs aren't a security
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Re:Why can't they have the people who make there A (Score:2)
Seriously, they make a lot of revenue from their ATM business; banks can afford to pay handsomely for them, since #1) they're banks and have lots of money (mostly ours), and #2) ATMs generate revenue for them (that $2 you pay a competitor's bank when you use your ATM.)
The voting machines, on the other hand, make very little money for them, since towns, counties, states, etc generally don't have enough money to make the voting machines profitable when they're sold. So there's two things going on: Die
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Other replies did a good job of explaining why this is...
Good idea. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Good idea. (Score:5, Funny)
Now when elections are stolen, people will be PESsed off.
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and yes, it really is a POS.
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Re:Good idea. (Score:4, Funny)
Matrix voice: "We've been watching you for some time Mr Anderson".
Diebold and Microsoft (Score:2)
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MS is aimed at corporations, who are top heavy with clueless idiots. You can point out the obvious to them, and they will blindly keep doing whatever it is they were doing, even if it tanks the company. Afterwards, they will be hired by another company to do the exact same thing over again, only they will get paid WAAAAY more this time around.
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Putting frosting on a turd.... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Gee, I wonder why not? (Score:2)
surely we can do better for a rebrand (Score:5, Funny)
- Guaranteed Result Election Systems
- Early and Often Voting Machines
- DPV (Dead People Vote) Solutions
- NTSC (Never Twice the Same Count) Electionware
Die Bold II: Die Bolder (Score:3, Funny)
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Premiere Election Solutions Technology, PEST.
It should be obvious ... (Score:2)
"Apparently their rebranding effort only goes so far."
Politicians want to know what they're buying when they buy an election. They KNOW Diebold can deliver the votes!
I smell a business opportunity here... (Score:3, Interesting)
At a crossroads like this, an OSS company could just step right in and take over the whole election software market. If some OSS platform were successful here, there'd be no competition from closed source platforms after that. OSS voting forever after. I know that "open" means never having to rely on a single source (if you don't want to), but a great hardware solution coupled with all open source code would make one (or a few) companies really pop.
I have not been looking too hard for OSS voting machines myself, so maybe they're already out there. In that case, they just need some PR so that they're visible to the general population.
Redhat? Ubuntu? Where are you?... Here's your opportunity...
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Yep, it's been used over here, and runs on Linux live CDs. http://www.softimp.com.au/evacs/index.html [softimp.com.au]
There's a Wired article here: http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/2003/11/61 045 [wired.com]
Re:I smell a business opportunity here... (Score:5, Interesting)
Another group of companies who are ideally positioned to benefit from this are gaming machine manufacturers. In fact, since ATMs probably aren't as open to government scrutiny and regulation as your average video poker machine is, the gaming machine manufacturing industry is probably *better* positioned to comply with government regulation and produce a tamper-resistant system than Diebold is, and could probably fairly easily adapt one of their gaming platforms to the purpose - you sign in, you get a card to insert in the machine (good for one "voting credit"), you make and review your choices, you collect the machine-punched verification card and "voting card" and deposit both in the appropriate boxes on the way out (with the punched "ballot paper" really only being for verification and tamper-control purposes). Forget the privacy concerns - the voting cards needn't be traceable to any particular individual, and could be constantly re-coded with one-time-use "voting-credit-numbers" as they're recycled during the course of the day - and since the paper electoral rolls won't have timestamps on them, there'll be no way to tie the time of use of a particular voting-credit to a particular voter. To me, this almost seems natural and self-evident, and I'd be very surprised if there weren't gaming companies considering either doing this themselves or spinning off subsidiaries to do this themselves.
Who's Behind The Curtains? (Score:5, Interesting)
by Bob Fitrakis.
Link: http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0225-05.htm [commondreams.org]
More: " (Bev) Harris writes that the hacked documents expose how the mainstream media reversed their call projecting Al Gore as winner of Florida after someone subtracted 16,022 votes from Al Gore, and in still some undefined way, added 4000 erroneous votes to George W. Bush. Hours later, the votes were returned. One memo from Lana Hires of Global Election Systems, now Diebold, reads: I need some answers! Our department is being audited by the County. I have been waiting for someone to give me an explanation as to why Precinct 216 gave Al Gore a minus 16,022 [votes] when it was uploaded. Another hacked internal memo, written by Talbot Iredale, Senior VP of Research and Development for Diebold Election Systems, documents unauthorized replacement votes in Volusia County.
Harris also uncovered a revealing 87-page CBS news report and noted, According to CBS documents, the erroneous 20,000 votes in Volusia was directly responsible to calling the election for Bush. The first person to call the election for Bush was Fox election analyst John Ellis, who had the advantage of conferring with his prominent cousins George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush."
And: "Documents illustrate that the Reagan and Bush administration supported computer manipulation in both Noriegas rise to power in Panama and in Marcos attempt to retain power in the Philippines."
Two words: crooked casino.
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Not Washington. George III of England.
Just sayin'. Most likely they're all fixed, or none of them are. I'm guessing both.
I guess their new slogan didn't work. (Score:3, Funny)
To quote a certain famous politician... (Score:3)
Five?
No, calling a tail a leg don't make it a leg. - Abraham Lincoln
They can call their "system" whatever they want to. It'll still be bad news.
Not a very good acronym... (Score:2)
voting machines are unfit for public voting (Score:2, Insightful)
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All of the issues that you discussed can be subverted with better software, and more secure hardware. For i
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I don't really know how to respond to this, other than that I am disappointed for your lack of open-mindedness towards voting machines. Electronic voting technology is an active area of research: See http://accurate-voting.org/ [accurate-voting.org] for one example.
Which is why you won't ever understand. If someone qualified to post to slashdot feels that way, what does that tell you about Joe Voter? THey simply will never trust these till many generations have come and gone. It's about trust and transparency not mathematical formulas and perfect equipment. It simply matters not how "provably" correct the research gets. There's always going to be close upset elections that defy polls--else there would be no reason to have elections--and when that happens people
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Actually, you aren't even guaranteed the right to vote , let alone your vote be kept secret .
Believe it or not, the U.S. constitution allows government to deny your right to vote, as long as it is not based on your race or slave status.
There have been numerous amendments since (such as women's right to vote), but you're still not guaranteed an irrefutable right to. For example, Texas law den
And of course... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Rebrand the discussion -- computer assisted voting (Score:4, Informative)
It's not a perfect system but it provides the basis for a system that's pretty much on par with paper. That is, the problems with election fraud we would see would be the same types of problems paper ballots suffer from (ie people voting twice, someone stealing a ballot box, some poll running out of paper).
This is what is in the draft proposal for New York State voting machines (among many other requirements regarding privacy and the disabled etc). But I only found this out recently by clicking on a signature from a slashdot poster. I encourage everyone to take a few minutes and visit http://www.blackboxvoting.org/ [blackboxvoting.org] and check what sort of voting machines your state has, is testing, or is thinking about getting.
Also, for those new yorkers out there, you may want to visit this page [state.ny.us] about the testing underway for NYS eletronic voting machines for 2008.
Re:Rebrand the discussion -- computer assisted vot (Score:2)
That's what people are complaining about
Seriously though, technically it's an easy problem to solve - the USA has plenty of smart people who can build practical solutions.
The real problem is the US Gov would prefer to be the one to decide who gets to be the next US Gov and do whatever it takes, just like they prefer to decide who gets to be the next Iraqi Gov.
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Meanwhile back in the real world, the problems you had in Florida, and what caused all theses changes, was human based. Bad ballot design and people not following the instructions of the machines such as emptying the punched chat holders. Even th
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Obligatory (Score:2)
Let's apply ol' wild west rules here: (Score:2)
All I can say is: Die Boldly, Diebold...the sooner the better. I'm tired of 'running iron' elections being acceptable.
Hang 'em high, and dry!
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Get out the kiwi! (Score:2)
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Rebranding was a crime in early 1800s. It should be a crime today and Diebold criminally convicted on livestock rebranding.
This was not intended to get voting machines back (Score:3, Insightful)
Calling them Premier Election Systems does not undo the damage that's been done, but it does help deflect future damages. Any attempt to recertify the machines under the new name is probably something they still would have done under the old name.
That doesn't make the machines any less awful. It doesn't absolve Diebold of the responsibility for what it has done, nor does it mean that their ATM machines are any more trustworthy now. If I were the bank manager, I probably still would not buy their machines. But, if we are going to criticize the company for its incompetence, let us at least criticize them for the incompetencies which they demonstrate -- not ones which we misinterpret into their strategies.
Re:This was not intended to get voting machines ba (Score:3, Interesting)
Long ago, people were scared of "NutraSweet" because of some series of news stories and bad press. So they took the label off of the foods that contain it... just the label though. It's still there. Just look for "aspartame" in the ingredients list.
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Re:This was not intended to get voting machines ba (Score:2)
A rose by any other name? (Score:5, Funny)
[Marketing Guy] Let's rebrand.
[CEO] Ok, what do you suggest?
[Marketing Guy] How about "Blossom"
[CEO] I love it. Lets run with that...
Smells Like Republicans! (Score:4, Insightful)
They will rebrand, reorganize, etc., but in the end, don't forget their loyalty is to one political party. That is where the lobbying money goes, so you know who to blame whenever there's an e-voting fiasco.
I see one CEO has been reading... (Score:2)
The Gator^H^H^H^H^HClaria business plan.
Trademark violation? (Score:2)
What's really important (Score:2)
Open-source it? (Score:2)
Yeah, right, like that's gonna happen!
Why the whole fuss? (Score:2)
Here in Serbia, where we had a lot of problems with the elections, the voting itself and counting are the least problem. We had exactly the same problem as USA (i.e. corrupted legal system) but the voting procedure itself was never an issue.
Manual counting takes only couple of hours even for the largest poll stations. Summing the results takes exactly the same time everywhere. Time for summing the results is so
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The Americans vote for a lot of other dumb things on their ballots. It's a stupid process. The whole thing needs to be overhauled.
http://www.danbricklin.com/log/sampleballot.htm
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I believe the driving force behind electronic ballots are (1) lower the amount of time it takes to post the unofficial election results, (2) eliminate any evidence that a vote has been tampered, and (3) make it impossible to have a recount.
When it comes to counting speed we need to remember that it's not official until the meeting of the electoral college (if my memory serves me right) which meets in December (41 days from the election). This need for speed is solely for the news industry's benefit. Every
Classic neocon solution (Score:2)
If something doesn't work right...change the name. It sounds bad to say we kidnapped people and kept them in secret prisons. "Extraordinary rendition" sounds so much more pleasant.
The expression is "Chrome plating a turd" (Score:2)
I wouldn't use that system to elect a Girl Guide to the Cookie Fundraiser.
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It still is shocking that SOME people gave a dam. Most people fuck around all the time, and its probably the only reason to really be alive. I mean computers are nice folks but i'd rather have my fingers else where.
Yeah, obligitory, I'm not getting it lately either (Score:2)
"Right because as we all know, that a man will only have one female sexual partner in his whole life..."
This is Slashdot. Some guys should be so lucky.
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if a guy makes good leadership decisions we shouldn't be judging him on sex. shit, we shouldn't even want to know about who he fucks! bob my accountant could be gay for all i know, i still appreciate he's the best man to do my tax.
personally, i'd prefer a well-laid president. probably start less wars in an effort to enhance his apparently lacking masculinity. maybe we should shout bush a hooker - 'y
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--
Solar power with no maintenance fee: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-user
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