Voting Machine Manual Instructed Election Officials To Use Weak Passwords (vice.com) 197
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: An election security expert who has done risk-assessments in several states since 2016 recently found a reference manual that appears to have been created by one voting machine vendor for county election officials and that lists critical usernames and passwords for the vendor's tabulation system. The passwords, including a system administrator and root password, are trivial and easy to crack, including one composed from the vendor's name. And although the document indicates that customers will be prompted periodically by the system to change the passwords, the document instructs customers to re-use passwords in some cases -- alternating between two of them -- and in other cases to simply change a number appended to the end of some passwords to change them.
The vendor, California-based Unisyn Voting Solutions, makes an optical-scan system called OpenElect Voting System for use in both precincts and central election offices. The passwords in the manual appear to be for the Open Elect Central Suite, the backend election-management system used to create election definition files for each voting machine before every election -- the files that tell the machine how to apportion votes based on the marks voters make on a ballot. The suite also tabulates votes collected from all of a county's Unisyn optical scan systems. The credentials listed in the manual include usernames and passwords for the initial log-in to the system as well as credentials to log into the client software used to tabulate and store official election results.
The vendor, California-based Unisyn Voting Solutions, makes an optical-scan system called OpenElect Voting System for use in both precincts and central election offices. The passwords in the manual appear to be for the Open Elect Central Suite, the backend election-management system used to create election definition files for each voting machine before every election -- the files that tell the machine how to apportion votes based on the marks voters make on a ballot. The suite also tabulates votes collected from all of a county's Unisyn optical scan systems. The credentials listed in the manual include usernames and passwords for the initial log-in to the system as well as credentials to log into the client software used to tabulate and store official election results.
Why is it (Score:3, Funny)
The that biggest idiots always end up handling the most important tasks?
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Because technical brilliance, and leadership, are two entirely different skill sets.
Re: Why is it (Score:2, Interesting)
True. One involves bullying others in a manner that looks like comradery. The other is very much technical and facts-based.
Hint: Facts get in the way of achieving desireable outcomes. Meeeeeh
The Creds (Score:2)
The password is: password
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For extra security you should set the password to "username"
Reasoning (Score:3)
Ever seen the people who volunteer to staff polling places? Do you want to budget for the tech support staff needed to reset passwords when Aunt Eugenia forgot it again?
Re:Reasoning (Score:4, Informative)
in Australia (apparently a nazi country since we have govt regulation of business, gun control, national healthcare?) we also have the Electoral commission.
They run the voting system.
Everyone votes the same way, on paper.
They hire extra staff from existing public service agencies, experienced & arguably trustworthy govt workers.
Voting is too important to let states or cities make up their own rules, or to let just anyone work in the polls.
And boy, am I curious to see the results and hysteria of these US midterm elections, it is going to make Bush vs Gore look like a couple of toddlers fighting over a toy!
Re: Reasoning (Score:4)
No, Voting is too important to let centrals run it. I don't think you understand how voting works in the US. Nationally, no one votes directly but same safeguards as states.
State level, you need a LOT of corruption across a highly distributed network of independent voluntary organizations to impact a vote. That complex non-standard setup is the primary safeguard against vote results tampering. The second is the volunteers who have a self interest in making sure the other isn't cheating and many independents who ensure no one cheats.
At the local level, you do have independent and committee based outsiders who ensure the few locals aren't cheating the local population.
The paper based voting system in the US that has been used for decades is pretty good. It was the State level discrimination laws and more recently end voter manipulation via social media that has been their only real threats. A "committee" would have made both worse.
BTW, we do have many committees here, they just aren't the only thing the system relies on.
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State level, you need a LOT of corruption across a highly distributed network of independent voluntary organizations to impact a vote
The votes move from hand to hand from thousands of locations through small groups of trusted parties. That's tens of thousands of weak links--millions in some states.
The paper based voting system in the US that has been used for decades is pretty good.
It is. It's a complex mess with enormous integrity problems, but it's only severely-abused in a few places--and that severe abuse is relatively minor. A strong, decisive victory or even just huge voter turn-out is usually enough to overcome the level of tampering even in states where it's rampant.
We estimate about 30,000 ballots just tos
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This is all true, but it ignores the fact that we have partisan administration of the voting system, as well. And that's always the party in power. And we HAVE that "lot of corruption" necessary to make an impact.
We have unfair poling place positioning and voter to polling place rations. We have voter suppression based on IDs. We have laws which forbid felons to vote. We have no penalties for targeted "accidental" mailing of the wrong date or location for voting by the partisan voting administrators.
USA is a Republic and oldest existing Govt (Score:2)
Thanks for all the advice, rest of the world, but we're good here. It's nice you've finally figured out how to run your countries. Keep in mind that there are many, many years between the founding of our countries current governance and the founding of your current government. It's not even close.
If and when this government topples, then you, the rest of the world, can compete to see which of your governments last as long.
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Right. Not invented here. Therefore of no value. Yep. Good point.
Let's all go back to polishing our flintlocks.
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The House may change, but the Senate is going to stay R, or possibly turn more R, because more D's than R's are up for reelection.
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in Australia (apparently a nazi country since we have govt regulation of business, gun control, national healthcare?) ...!
I believe that every developed country on the planet, with the exception of the US, is a 'nazi country' by this definition. :-)
So don't you go feeling you're special
[written from nazi country Canada]
Monkey See, Monkey Do (Score:1)
I bet they hired some clueless shlub who wrote the manual based on observing actual practices instead of checking with a security expert. Seen it happen.
Boss: "Fred, I'm reassigning you to write the manual for the new voting system."
Fred: "But I don't know anything about voting systems."
Boss: "Just observe the testers in action, and write down what they do."
Fred: "Okay, I can do that! On-it, boss!..."
Re: Monkey See, Monkey Do (Score:2)
Let's put aside the issue of using a password based system in the first place. But a "security expert" would have made things worse. So the official manual will say use a secure 10 character, upper, lower, special, & number password.
The unofficial manual will say look for tape under the machine.
Atleast with the current manual, people will be less likely to share their accounts because it's so easy to setup new ones.
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Let's put aside the issue of using a password based system in the first place.
No, let's not do that. It never even occurred to me to use passwords when I stared writing the SAFE VOTES guidelines (elections procedures and standards specifically for elections run via direct-recording electronic voting). I didn't even require 2FA--largely because using the credentials to do anything permanently takes the machine out of commission, causes alarms, and generally draws a whole lot of attention and stops your election, but also because the credential is created at poll open and is destroy
Failure is not an option (Score:5, Insightful)
Few obvious questions.
First, with aren't they using smart cards with passwords on the keys?
Second, why did the software permit weak choices? Manual be damned.
Third, why are infosec officers not replacing those pages in the manual, training users in proper procedures, rejecting the products at user acceptance or running tools for weak password detection?
This is a failure of the entire procurement procedure, start to finish.
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First, with aren't they using smart cards with passwords on the keys?
Because voting machine manufacturers are money-changers, not security experts. They make ATMs, they make voting machines.
Second, why did the software permit weak choices?
Made to order.
Third, why are infosec officers not replacing those pages in the manual, training users in proper procedures, rejecting the products at user acceptance or running tools for weak password detection?
The same companies who provide the machines also provide voter outreach and elections consulting. They'd be the ones deciding if you should reject this shit.
Why do you think I'm starting a business and breaking into that industry? Paper ballots look kind of like the Internet to me (from thousands of polling places, through the hands of small groups of trustees, flow
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The voting machine companies arrived like there was a gold rush. The most important selling point of any voting machine system is "NO RECOUNTS" because A. recounts cost money, and B. The people counting the votes don't like them.
NO RECOUNT sets the bar pretty low -- "just throw a machine together that spits out an excel spreadsheet or an access database."
NO RECOUNT actively discourages a paper trail.
The designs were stupid. The purchases were stupid. All money spent on them was a mistake. No one wants t
Perhaps rely on physical security. (Score:1)
Based on the same principle that the way to make people drive more carefully would be a 6 inch spike in the middle of the steering wheel, people rely on passwords and encryption when they aren't completely effective. More to the point, the users typically don't understand them that well. The passwords themselves are next to useless here. Might as well remove them entirely.
If the security systems are removed, then we'd have to rely on thing
Re: Perhaps rely on physical security. (Score:2)
Or you can just use actual secure methods of authentication. The stuff that is found on any standard enterprise level laptop. TPM chips, two factor, encryption, etc. I think we got this stuff down pat about 10 years ago? In the IT world, that's basically a lifetime ago.
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2 factor authentication is inconvenient, and people circumvent inconvenience. In this case they can't even be bothered doing single factor authentication properly. So they'll share the password, and the security card, or SecureID generator or whatever.
I think to get this to work we'll need to fix human stupidity. Sadly I can;t see this happening.
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So here's the thing: computers can be made impenetrable; physical locks can't. Computers, however, are immensely difficult to validate: we can ensure a small code body (maybe 4,000 lines) is correct, but we can't ensure the whole OS stack, the enormous application in its entirety, all libraries, and so forth are correct.
You know that thing where you can't hack into a computer that's unplugged and unpowered? You can totally hack into a lock by getting a large enough hammer. Any lock. You can manufac
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Make sure the machine remains visible at all times. Put plastic tape over any access hatch so you know if it's been tampered with.
Lexan case, locks, sensors, alarms--visual and audio.
If the paper is then counted by machine, then fair enough
Analog failure: machine misreads ballot. Direct-recording machines can display the ballot as it is understood.
Paper is easy to compromise: you can manufacture, alter, and lose it. The same is true of all data, really. You only have integrity inside the polling center.
how hard is it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Should not be too hard making a good voting system?
Sweden (and many Europeans do it like this): Every citizen get sent a physical voting card to their home address (including information on where and how to vote). No need for registration, just being a citizen (national elections) or at least legal resident (local elections). Election places are all over towns, usually in schools of libraries. They are staffed by volunteer respected citizen.
On election day, you go to the election place, take some ballots and envelope, and put one ballot in one envelope per election. Then you show your card at the front desk (always staffed by several volunteers), and get ticket off in the electoral roll. If you have lost your card, you can use some ID. The envelopes are put in sealed boxes (one per election) under your supervision. (Oh, you can also hand in you vote in advance, at advance election places anywhere in the country (and at consulates). They will be sent to your election place, and used if you haven't voted physically)
The boxes are kept under supervision, and when election closes, counting starts. Everyone is welcome supervising the opening of boxes and envelopes, as well as the counting. Results are usually presented the same evening. The ballots are then handed in and re-counted once at a central location for each county just to be sure.
The system is easy to audit, and hard to cheat - especially on a systematic nation-wide level (which is much easier if there is a electronic system to attack)
Re: how hard is it? (Score:2)
That's pretty much how it's done in much of the US at the local level. Except for mailing and using a voter card. Proof of identity & residency is all that is needed.
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In Germany, the voting card is just for convinience. An ID is enough, but without the voting card the election observers would have to look up the name in their list.
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In California you're allowed to use a provisional ballot much of the time. Ie, if you move to a new location within the same county but did not re-register you can still vote but with a provisional ballot, and it will get counted as long as it shows you did not vote in any other precinct. If you move to a different county without re-registering, you can still vote with a provisional ballot, it will just take a bit longer to verify. For most hiccups, you can get the provisional ballot.
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The system is easy to audit, and hard to cheat - especially on a systematic nation-wide level (which is much easier if there is a electronic system to attack)
The same people who claim that there is election fraud are not making the claim because they want to eliminate election fraud.
So they would hate your rather nice system with a passion.
Defective by design (Score:3)
Anyone wanna bet that this was done deliberately to make them easier to hack? Whoever made these things should know damn well how to keep it secure. Especially with the shenanigans around Diebold and so on. Election fraud is big news with the people who make the damned machines so there's no way they are doing this out of ignorance. These rules seem specifically designed with the OPPOSITE of security in mind.
You know, you can have one orange finger and you'll get the benefit of the doubt. Two orange fingers and you'll still get the innocent until proven guilty treatment. But when your whole hand is orange and there's cheese powder on your lips and teeth? Dude, I didn't have to see you do it to know that you stole the fucking cheetos!
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Diebold made ATMs. They're money-changers. They see a need for a system that collects and transmits votes.
When you build a microwave oven, you don't load it up with fork-detection hardware. You tell people to never microwave a fork. In an election, people are intentionally trying to microwave a fork, and you need defenses against that. Diebold, ES&S, Hart, these people built a microwave to accomplish microwaving food, not to accomplish microwaving food in hostile territory where even the people w
humans (Score:2)
No E-Voting - We Know Too Much (Score:2)
Similar story (Score:2)
I used to work as a temp on GoDaddy's web design team.
Our first day, we had to go through a "security" tutorial that, among other things, advised that we satisfy the "mixed-case and at least one symbol" requirement by using an initial capital letter and putting an exclamation point at the end.
I e-mailed the security team to explain to them why this is bad advice ("you've just removed all the benefits a six-character mixed-case password with a symbol has over a five-character all-lowercase password"). Unsur
Unity? (Score:1)
So you agree we shouldn't use electronic voting machines?
Great! Agreement!
Go ahead do the gaslighting or whatever its called, as long as it ends up with verifiable election systems. Systems where the voter knows the machine counted their vote correctly, and that Kemp agent could not simply upload a file to a voting machine to set a new vote result.
This is not the Russian elections.
Re:Unity? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Unity? (Score:5, Informative)
That's how we do it here in California, which has the fairest and most secure elections in the country.
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Re:Unity? (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, we have all three. When I registered to vote earlier this year, I had to show proof of my citizenship and a photo ID, and we have vote-by-mail that you don't have to be "absent" to use.
By the way, the states that experts have ranked as the worst for electoral integrity are Arizona, Oklahoma, Wisconsin and Tennessee. Also, Texas, Georgia and South Carolina rank pretty low.
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Texas doesn't require voter ID, so why aren't you complaining about them? Neither do South Carolina, West Virginia, Utah and a bunch of other states.
"Most of the rest of the world" has universal, single-payer healthcare. I don't see you calling for that you dumb fuck-whistle.
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Project Veritas? Really?
James O'Keefe is just Jacob Wohl with costumes.
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Citation needed on "most of the rest of the world". I've voted in two countries, and neither of them demands to see ID at the time of voting. (Incidentally, neither one limits the franchise to citizens only, either.)
Seriously - citation? It can't be too hard to find this sort of thing out.
Re:Unity? (Score:5, Insightful)
Greetings from the rest of the world. Here in Finland we do in fact have to provide ID upon voting, and we do not have to to register to vote because your ID is checked against a list of eligible voters upon arrival to the voting site. However, social services also funds the cost of the ID for those who cannot afford it (which is why essentially everyone in Finland has an ID). This being the case, the ID requirement does not prevent anyone from voting regardless of income status. This point is often conveniently left out in the american discussions over voter IDs when the 'pretty much everyone else does it' -argument is presented because from what I've seen so far, voter ID proposals in the States don't have provisions for providing an ID for people who can't pay for it, and that's the crux of the problem.
Voting is such a fundamental right that it should never be gated behind a financial barrier of any kind, wouldn't you agree?
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Re:Unity? (Score:4, Informative)
This depends entirely on what is accepted as an ID, and how hard it is to get. I recently moved, and it was quite a hassle, partially because I can't drive. ... and they never did do anything that would really check that I was who I said I was.
The new state wouldn't accept the ID from the old state, and demanded a birth certificate. And the one issued by the hospital wasn't acceptable, it had to be a government issued birth certificate. And the place where I was born raised a large number of obstacles to getting the certificate without going there. (I don't know what it would have been like if I'd gone there in person.) Eventually they issued one after paying money, waiting, filling out forms, etc.
So. The issuing of the ID was free. The getting of it took a modest amount of money (not enough to pay for the paperwork), but a tremendous amount of bureaucratic shuffling, and didn't really prove anything anyway except that I'd gone through the bureaucratic paper shuffling.
So I'm not really impressed with the "ID requirements". They don't provide actual ID and they cause a tremendous amount of hassle. Photo + digitized fingerprints would be much better as unique IDs, or any of various other biometric markers. They should always be needed to be tested in person for any significant trust, because the "coded id" could be duplicated, so this should only be used to issue secondary ids from. And the database should never be connected to the internet, even indirectly, but the "coded id" should be matchable against any other reading.
Even so, you couldn't trust this system, because eventually there would be illicit copies made. And in a way this lack of trust is valid, because I'm certainly not the same person I was a decade ago.
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You can get jobs without ID. You need a social security number, but you don't need ID for that. The problem is that the people for whom voter IDs are difficult to get tend to be the sorts of people who don't vote the way the powers that be want them to. Ie, the poor, the elderly shut-ins, the homeless, widows who never needed this stuff until after the husbands died, etc.
When elections are tight, disenfranchising a very tiny minority is enough to sway elections.
Getting a driver's license is a royal pain
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You can get jobs without ID.
Not legally. You must fill out an I-9 form [uscis.gov] when you are employed - and that requires considerably more than just an SSN.
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Ya, this was a pain for me. Drivers license is used, but I never had a social security card (cardboard, hand typed, totally and utterly insecure) so eventually I went and got a new one. I think I've used a birth certificate before, although I may have to get a new one since it's not "long form".
I'm still thinking about the good old days before we had soviet style "homeland" security.
Re: Unity? (Score:2)
"the good old days before we had soviet style "homeland" security"
I, too, remember living in a Free republic. Alas, the youth of today have grown up under the Empire. They may never know the taste of that simple, relaxed Freedom we thought had given us victory over the Soviet Union.
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Greetings from the rest of the world.
Best intro ever. And a nice follow-thru to boot. This post wins.
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Greetings from the rest of the world. Here in Finland we do in fact have to provide ID upon voting, and we do not have to to register to vote because your ID is checked against a list of eligible voters upon arrival to the voting site. However, social services also funds the cost of the ID for those who cannot afford it (which is why essentially everyone in Finland has an ID). This being the case, the ID requirement does not prevent anyone from voting regardless of income status. This point is often conveniently left out in the american discussions over voter IDs when the 'pretty much everyone else does it' -argument is presented because from what I've seen so far, voter ID proposals in the States don't have provisions for providing an ID for people who can't pay for it, and that's the crux of the problem.
Voting is such a fundamental right that it should never be gated behind a financial barrier of any kind, wouldn't you agree?
This.
Here in the UK we do not need to provide ID, but do need to provide our name to get it struck off the roll. However registration is required as we have to vote in our electorate and only one electorate, so it needs to be known which electorate we live in. if I had to provide ID, any form would be acceptable, including ones issued for free by the government or a reputable organisation (like a student ID).
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There is a problem that many in the US do not believe voting is a right, and they're greatly opposed to the wrong sorts of people voting since they might vote for the wrong things. There are those who don't want college students to vote, since they're not in the country for a full 12 months. There are those who don't want convicted felons to vote even after they are out of prison. There are even those suspicious of members of the military voting when they are stationed overseas.
Re:Unity? (Score:4, Informative)
Do they? 'Cause that's news to me. I asked an American living here in Finland that I have befriended about this and he said it's BS. So one of you guys is wrong. I tend to trust my friends more than strangers on the internet but because I wanted to make sure I went to Google and 10 seconds later found this in the wiki [wikipedia.org]
The study in question is a 2014 study from Harvard Law School titled The High Cost of ‘Free’ Photo Voter Identification Cards ' [harvard.edu]
So a trusted and informed friend and a dude from Harvard Law against 1 anonymous coward... damn, this is a tough one but I do think you may in fact be full of shit, because I did crunch the numbers and came tot he conclusion that a 'free card' costing anywhere from 75 $ upwards is not in fact free.
This reminds me of that quote from Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy:
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I think this is because Republican states are the most intent to prevent those who might lean Democratic from voting. That's the poor, minorities, college students, etc. In Democratic leaning states it is much more difficult to prevent or discourage rich whites from voting.
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Damnit, the link to the study is broken, sorry people. Here's a working one. [harvard.edu]
I clearly need more coffee.
Legal fees for an ID??? (Score:2)
Sorry, you, your friend and the dumb ass from Harvard are still wrong.
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An assertion is not proof of anything, and is only evidence of one person's opinion. He quoted a study (which I didn't bother to check) and provided a (corrected) link. Admittedly I didn't follow it. This is at least the form of evidence based decision making.
You offered only your assertion.
Re: Unity? (Score:2)
C'mon bro - we live in a bureaucratic totalitarian state. If one doesn't have a valid government ID, one is good and truly fucked. Voting would be the very least of one's problems.
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How do you show proof of citizenship? A driver's license doesn't cut it. No one in the US is issued with a certificate of citizenship when they are born. My birth certificate may not even count for me to get my Real ID as now apparently I may have to apply for a "long form" version. A passport may work, but very few in America have those or carry them around everywhere. To register I prove my identity, but not my citizenship, but check a box that I agree under penalty of perjury that I am a citizen.
In m
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Sorry, but no. Absentee ballots are a permanently available choice. Also, the paper ballots, while they exist, are read by a machine, probably the one mentioned in the article. I've never heard of the original paper ballots actually being recounted manually to check the result.
FWIW, this information is current as of July, 2018. I'm not sure of it's current state. I'm also not sure which items are county or city specific.
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Paper ballots in every state are read by machine, and they are retained in case a recount is needed, which it seldom is because except for a few tokens we keep around for laughs, we don't allow Republicans to get anywhere near a posit
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Changing the name doesn't change the thing. I was permanently registered to use an absentee ballot, because one time I needed to, and I never changed it back, but I did usually drop it off at the polling place.
FWIW, I don't accept that all Democrats are honest at counting votes. I also don't accept that all Republicans are dishonest at counting votes. So the end of your first sentence is invalid for me (and calls into question any argument I can't check).
Re: Unity? (Score:2)
Paper ballots are a good, necessary start. However they are by no means sufficient to secure elections against organized corruption.
Consider for a moment several amusing stories of election antics from San Franshitsco: http://sfist.com/2016/11/04/ri... [sfist.com]
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Funny how the voter ID types go running for cover when it's pointed out that a national ID card would take care of the issue, and does so in most countries. But a national ID card ZOMG NWO!!
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Re: Unity? RATZO = racist seditious traitor KILLED (Score:2)
3/5 US citizens don't have a passport. I bet that's a little higher in the voting population which has a lot of elderly that traveled less abroad (they also didnt need passports for MX & CA).
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Aren't there still a bunch of states that don't have RealID? I know Missouri doesn't.
Re: Unity? RATZO = racist seditious traitor KILLED (Score:2)
You sure told 'im, Boris!
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Respect to Washington. They do elections right up there.
Re: Unity? (Score:2)
"People a lot smarter than you"
Respek their authoritay!
Re:Unity? (Score:5, Insightful)
In Russia they use paper ballots, and the number of people through the door is about 1/3rd of the total claimed vote count.
When a candidate wins that Putin doesn't like, he cancels the election due to ballot stuffing (because they didn't stuff enough ballots in to rig the vote, they have to cancel it due to their own ballot stuffing!).
You also need the structures in place to verify the count, verify the votes correspond to the people who voted and so on.
Once you decide to put party before country, and manage to seize power over the judicial processes that control the election you are lost.
You end up with elections run by the people who are running for election (Kemp in Georgia), decided by partisan judges (like Kavanaugh), with news outlets telling lies they know are lies. (Fox News).
Re: Unity? (Score:2)
It's not some "commission" or "committee"; it's the people. There are still enough people here who will standup to corruption.
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Think about the Internet. There are thousands of points where data leaves, moves through intermediate routers, changing hands, until it reaches a location. Your bank, for example.
Why do you use encryption when sending your credit card details? It moves from your PC to your ISP, through several core routers. Random people can't sniff it. Your traffic isn't exposed to untrusted third parties; arguably, all of the systems through which your data flows are more-trusted than the merchant to whom you're s
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Around here (Canada), the paper ballots are counted at the polling station when the polls close, with members of the public including party members of all interested parties, watching the process like hawks. At that, I'm free to watch the whole process from beginning to end if I desire (assuming room, which I've never heard of being a problem)
There is a weakness with the advanced/absentee votes, which almost never enough to affect the outcome, having to be stored. Usually the absentee votes aren't even both
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Public view [youtube.com]?
Your main weakness is recounting. Let's work backwards from electronic for this one.
With electronic voting machines, once you've proven the integrity of the machine, you can prove the ballot set. Everyone votes, the machine displays some kind of computation, and only then do you enter the machine to remove the ballots (digital media copy, whatever).
For provisional ballots cast in-person (wrong polling center, etc.), you load the provisional ballots into your hash set by the same rules, ma
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That last one would be quite irritating, because sometimes elections are called outside of the usual timetable (e.g. to replace someone who died in office). I think I prefer the system in my country, where you have to renew your application each year. I get a reminder three months before my postal ballot registration expires, and as long as I don't sit on it for ten weeks I can be sure that my renewal is received before the registr
Voter ID = nazi bullshit (Score:2)
Like questioning Obama's birth certificate, the facts around voter ID - namely that in person vote fraud is so rare it may as well not exist - have been stated far too many times for anyone to advocate for it without engaging in outright sophistry. Sophistry like rattling off cases that wouldn't have been prevented by requiring an ID in the first place, like fraudulent registrations or ex-cons voting in states that don't allow it.
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Provisional ballots are not counted unless you go to the election officials office the next day and prove you are you. That's the whole point of a Provisional ballot.
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You probably wouldn't last 20 seconds in front of Robert Mueller without blurting out some retarded falsehood and getting insta-carted off to Federal prison, just like Trump is about to...
With Trump there are two possibilities.
1. He knows 100% what he is saying. He is on top of things but chooses to lie about everything, even when it makes no sense to do so.
2. He is mentally unfit for the position he is in, but not stupid. He is a very accomplished con man and is going with his gut and his wits to find the levers necessary to move the electorate, mo matter the cost, particularly with respect to keeping the senate, which are really the only ones who could really stop him.
Notice that (1) doe
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Nothing to misunderstand. A voting machine manual was insecure by design, and the only states where it was used were states run by Republican jackoffs. It's all right there in the article.
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A voting machine manual was insecure by design, and the only states where it was used were states run by Republican jackoffs.
False [verifiedvoting.org]. Admit your error, you jackoff. Or do you contend that IL and VA went for Trump, not Hillary! ?
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Because Obama literally told Trump in 2016 that it was a conspiracy theory to think our elections could be hacked.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/19/us/politics/obama-donald-trump-election.html
Selective amnesia seems to be a reoccurring thing in these days. Perhaps something is in the water?
Re:For the record (Score:4, Informative)
T wasn't blaming the "rigging" on Russia, but on Democrats/illegals. It was T's burden to show evidence for them doing such.
I suppose if you claim everything is rigged/bugged/fake, you'll accidentally be right roughly 10% of the time in a general sense.
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Yeahno. Trump wasn't a part of the establishment, which is why they came up with the the Russiagate BS to jerk him around as needed.
Have you not been paying attention? (Score:2)
It's in full swing:
https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]
https://www.vox.com/policy-and... [vox.com]
https://www.americanbar.org/pu... [americanbar.org]
Hell, even wikipedia has it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Meanwhile in DNC Land (Score:1)
Meanwhile in DNC Land, the DNC literally RIGGED their primary in 2016.
Hillary stole campaign money from other DNC candidates through a bizarre loophole allowing doners to give her over $100k each when the normal cap is $2.5k. (minor)
She colluded with Boston news outlets giving them Sanders smear stories to run, and telling them which days to run them.
Colluded with the WaPo, who fed her political stories early so her campaign could edit them and the WaPo would publish her versions.
Superdelegates.
Refusing to
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Hillary was a crap candidate and the DNC's shenanigans (I don't know that all of your points above are true -- I suspect many of them are false, but if every one were true it wouldn't change anything) were in HUGE part the reason we got into this mess. But the reality is we're now, quite blatantly a kleptocracy -- we've gone from a first world government to a third-world one over night. And the Republican party is frantically trying to stop anyone from doing anything about it.
The Democrats need to be back
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According to the article, every single one of the 10 states where these machines were used are Republican states where Donald Trump won.
Why doesn't anyone look surprised by that?
If the voting machinery was not corruptly designed to be intentionally hacked, they missed a good chance to do just that.
Carnegie Mellon performed a test to see how secure voting machines were. They were not secure at all. They had a pretend election, and could easily go in and switch votes so that the loser won.
There are still some rumblings regarding the Kerry vs Bush outcome in Ohio, and Karl Rove's election night meltdown when he refused to accept that the Kenyan Terror baby won Ohio. In the first