Politicked Off

Sharing upcoming technologies so we can get off the politics habit, and back to living with each other.

Whoa, watch out for voting woes this fall

New electronic voting machines have arrived in Yolo County, Calif., but there is one hitch: the audio program for the visually impaired in some of them works only in Vietnamese.

“Talk about panic,” said Freddy Oakley, the county’s top election official. “I’ve got gray-haired ladies as poll workers standing around looking stunned.”

As dozens of states are enforcing new voter registration laws and switching to paperless electronic voting systems, officials across the country are bracing for an Election Day with long lines and heightened confusion, followed by an increase in the number of contested results…….

……Arizona, California, Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania are among the states considered most likely to experience difficulties, according to voting experts who have been tracking the technology and other election changes.

Continue reading @ NY Times

Priceton University presents a fully independent security study of a Diebold AccuVote-TS voting machine. Scroll down the page for an easy to eat video of their findings.

It’s also interesting to note that two of the huge electronic voting machine manufacturers (Diebold being one of them) have heavy connections to the GOP and particularly Bush and ze gang.

The CEO of Diebold, Walden O’Dell, has even made extraordinary statements that he is “committed to delivering Ohio’s electorate votes to the President in this year’s election.”

Weeks later it comes out that the access panel door on a Diebold AccuVote-TS voting machine — the door that protects the memory card that stores the votes, and is the main barrier to the injection of a virus — can be opened with a standard key that is widely available on the Internet. If you have a jukebox, locking minibar, or even locking drawers in your office, you may already have a key that will work!

One final trail for you to follow:

Then, one muggy day in mid-August, Hood was surprised to see the president of Diebold’s election unit, Bob Urosevich, arrive in Georgia from his headquarters in Texas. With the primaries looming, Urosevich was personally distributing a “patch,” a little piece of software designed to correct glitches in the computer program. “We were told that it was intended to fix the clock in the system, which it didn’t do,” Hood says. “The curious thing is the very swift, covert way this was done.”

If you decide to vote and enounter any problems dial (1-866-OUR-VOTE).

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