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Uncertainty Clouds Future of E-Vote Tests |
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By Ian Hoffman, Staff Writer, Oakland Tribune
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December 01, 2005 |
Despite movement toward new standards for machines, change may be years away
This article appeared originally at InsideBayArea.com. It it reposted here with permission of the author.
SACRAMENTO — For 11 years, most states have relied on voting systems
tested to minimal federal standards, the results withheld from public
scrutiny and given the green light by a nongovernmental agency working
on a shoestring budget.
The era of approving tools of democracy on the cheap is coming to an
end, and judging by talk at a national gathering of voting experts here
this week, few will be sorry to see it go.
Carnegie
Mellon University computer expert Michael Shamos, a state
voting-systems certification official for Pennsylvania, is one of the
staunchest advocates for new, fully computerized electronic voting
systems.
But judging by what he has seen emerge from secretive, private labs
known as "independent testing authorities" and approved by the National
Association of State Elections Directors, Shamos said, "There's stuff in there that's so horrible, I can't understand it."
He found a quarter of the voting systems presented to Pennsylvania
unsuitable for elections, with such "glaring failures" as an inability
to tally votes correctly. A recent study led by the University of
Maryland showed all of six voting systems tested did not record 3 to 4
percent of the votes. What does pass state muster often can break down.
"I have good reason to believe that 10 percent of systems are failing
on Election Day. That's an unbelievable number," Shamos told an
assemblage of voting-system makers, elections officials and scientists.
"Why are we not in an uproar about the failure of (touch-screen voting)
systems?"
"Things are getting through the certification process that really
shouldn't," said software architect Eric Lazarus of DecisionSmith, a
voting-systems consultant for the Brennan Center for Justice at New
York University.
But if voting systems testing is as broken as scientists and voting
advocates say, there is wide-ranging debate about what the future
should look like. For the next year or two, the way that voting systems
reach U.S. counties and voters is not likely to change.
The U.S. Elections Assistance Commission is working on new standards
for voting systems, with more and tighter rules on wireless
communications, ease of use and backup paper records for electronic
voting machines. The commission and another federal agency also will be
taking over approval of voting systems from the national
election-officials group, as well as choosing labs to perform the
testing.
But most of those changes will take 12 to 18 months. And commission
Director Tom Wilkey, who had a hand in setting up the current method of
voting-systems testing and approval, suggested this week that testing
labs will be chosen in much the same way as they have been.
Given typical delays in approval and purchase of new voting systems,
that means the next Congress and president will be chosen in 2006 and
2008 on voting equipment tested and approved under the current national
system or something very like it.
But states such as California are moving toward more rigorous testing,
perhaps in league with other states. To explore those ideas,
California's Secretary of State Bruce McPherson hosted a conference on
voting-systems testing that was the largest West Coast gathering of
major players in the debate on voting technology in at least two years.
"California needs to assert leadership in this," said Stanford
computer-science professor and VerifiedVoting.org founder David Dill.
"I think we need to move more quickly than the federal government in
this area."
Voting-system makers are wary of tougher demands by the states. The
four largest vendors cautiously endorsed the idea of multistate
testing, as long as it could be done at one time and place.
"It would be similar to taking your car to an inspection site and
seeing if it met the emissions requirements for Kansas, Colorado and
Texas," said Ian Piper, compliance officer for Diebold.
But vendors say testing already is rigorous enough, redundant and
expensive. More testing will take time and money that could be used
making voting systems better, they said.
Vendors can spend several hundred thousand dollars getting a state's
OK. Many states rely on the national testing alone and start buying
approved voting systems almost immediately. Florida and Georgia rely
almost exclusively on their own testing.
California uses both the national testing and its own, which under McPherson has grown in rigor.
His office now requires every voting-system maker to supply dozens of
machines for a massive, mock election to ferret out manufacturing or
reliability problems. McPherson also has agreed to let a computer
expert try hacking into a Diebold system, and state officials are
weighing whether to require the same kind of security testing for all
voting systems.
Diebold and some local elections officials are frustrated that it has
taken more than two years to get the firm's latest touch-screen
approved for sale and use in California.
Partly because of the testing and Diebold's own delays, a quarter of
California's counties, including Alameda, Marin and San Joaquin,
probably will miss Jan. 1 federal and state deadlines for offering new,
handicapped-accessible voting machines with a paper record. Local
elections officials want several months of lead time getting used to
the new machines before the June primary.
"He's risking another huge meltdown for counties," said Los Angeles
County Registrar Conny McCormack, head of the state association of
local elections officials. "It's a setup for failure."
But the testing has disclosed security holes, as well as a bug that
caused one in five Diebold touch screens to crash if a voter slid a
finger on the screen, and forced Diebold to fix frequent paper jams in
a printer for ballot records.
Fixing the "sliding finger" bug alone cost the firm at least $250,000.
McPherson said this week that deadlines will have to take a back seat
to making sure voting systems are secure, accurate and reliable.
"There is no compromise where election integrity is concerned," he
said. "I cannot in good conscience certify systems that are not fully
tested. This is a one-time show, and we're going to do it carefully."
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