The Online Information Resource for Iowa's Progressive Community

Search

Login

Username:
Password:
Remember me 
 

Daily Archive

October 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31

By Year

Powered by BlogHarbor
Powered by BlogHarbor
View Article  GAO Report Finds Flaws In Electronic Voting
GAO Report Finds Flaws in Electronic Voting

t r u t h o u t | Report

Thank God! The truth comes out! I knew they cheated in the last election... was there ever really any doubt? GWB was never legitimately elected... not the first time, and not the second time. My question is, how could any of our own Representatives have voted against verifiable paper trails? And when will the rest of us hold them accountable?

Friday 21 October 2005


Rep. Waxman led twelve members of Congress today in releasing a new GAO report that found security and reliability flaws in the electronic voting process.

In a joint press release, Rep. Waxman said, "The GAO report indicates that we need to get serious and act quickly to improve the security of electronic voting machines. The report makes clear that there is a lack of transparency and accountability in electronic voting systems - from the day that contracts are signed with manufacturers to the counting of electronic votes on Election Day. State and local officials are spending a great deal of money on machines without concrete proof that they are secure and reliable."

The GAO report found flaws in security, access, and hardware controls, as well as weak security management practices by voting machine vendors. The report identified multiple examples of actual operational failures in real elections and found that while national initiatives to improve the security and reliability of electronic voting systems are underway, "it is unclear when these initiatives will be available to assist state and local election authorities."

Rep. Waxman also released a fact sheet summarizing the report's key findings.

Fact Sheet

Overall Findings

In October 2005, the Government Accountability Office released a comprehensive analysis of the concerns raised by the increasing use of electronic voting machines.

Overall, GAO found that "significant concerns about the security and reliability of electronic voting systems" have been raised (p. 22).

GAO indicated that "some of these concerns have been realized and have caused problems with recent elections, resulting in the loss and miscount of votes" (p. 23).

According to GAO, "election officials, computer security experts, citizen advocacy groups, and others have raised significant concerns about the security and reliability of electronic voting systems, citing instances of weak security controls, system design flaws, inadequate system version control, inadequate security testing, incorrect system configuration, poor security management, and vague or incomplete standards, among other issues. ... The security and reliability concerns raised in recent reports merit the focused attention of federal, state, and local authorities responsible for election administration" (p. 22-23).

Specific Problems Identified by GAO

Based on reports from election experts, GAO compiled numerous examples of problems with electronic voting systems. These included:

Flaws in System Security Controls

Examples of problems reported by GAO include (1) computer systems that fail to encrypt data files containing cast votes, allowing them to be viewed or modified without detection by internal auditing systems; (2) systems that could allow individuals to alter ballot definition files so that votes cast for one candidate are counted for another; and (3) weak controls that allowed the alteration of memory cards used in optical scan machines, potentially impacting election results. GAO concluded that "these weaknesses could damage the integrity of ballots, votes, and voting system software by allowing unauthorized modifications (p. 25).

Flaws in Access Controls

Examples of problems reported by GAO include (1) the failure to password-protect files and functions; (2) the use of easily guessed passwords or identical passwords for numerous systems built by the same manufacturer; and (3) the failure to secure memory cards used to secure voting systems, potentially allowing individuals to vote multiple times, change vote totals, or produce false election reports.

According to GAO, "in the event of lax supervision, the ... flaws could allow unauthorized personnel to disrupt operations or modify data and programs that are crucial to the accuracy and integrity of the voting process" (p. 26).

Flaws in Physical Hardware Controls

In addition to identifying flaws in software and access controls, GAO identified basic problems with the physical hardware of electronic voting machines. Example of problems reported by GAO included locks that could be easily picked or were all controlled by the same keys, and unprotected switches used to turn machines on and off that could easily be used to disrupt the voting process (p. 27).

Weak Security Management Practices by Voting Machine Vendors

Experts contacted by GAO reported a number of concerns about the practices of voting machine vendors, including the failure to conduct background checks on programmers and system developers, the lack of internal security protocols during software development, and the failure to establish clear chain of custody procedures for handling and transporting software (p. 29).

Actual Examples of Voting System Failure

GAO found multiple examples of actual operational failures in real elections. These examples include the following incidents:

In California, a county presented voters with an incorrect electronic ballot, meaning they could not vote in certain races (p. 29).

In Pennsylvania, a county made a ballot error on an electronic voting system that resulted in the county's undervote percentage reaching 80% in some precincts (p. 29-30).

In North Carolina, electronic voting machines continued to accept votes after their memories were full, causing over 4,000 votes to be lost (p. 31).

In Florida, a county reported that touch screens took up to an hour to activate and had to be activated sequentially, resulting in long delays (p. 31).

Current Federal Standards and Initiatives Are Ineffective and Are Unlikely to Provide Solutions in a Timely Fashion


GAO reported that voluntary standards for electronic voting, adopted in 2002 by the Federal Election Commission, have been criticized for containing vague and incomplete security provisions, inadequate provisions for commercial products and networks, and inadequate documentation requirements (pp. 32-33).

GAO further reported that "security experts and some election officials have expressed concern that tests currently performed by independent testing authorities and state and local election officials do not adequately assess electronic voting system security and reliability," and that "these concerns are amplified by what some perceive as a lack of transparency in the testing process" (p. 34). The GAO report indicated that national initiatives to improve voting system security and reliability of electronic voting systems (such as updated standards from the Election Assistance Commission; federal accreditation of independent testing laboratories; and certification of voting systems to national standards) are underway, but " a majority of these efforts either lack specific plans for implementation in time to affect the 2006 general election or are not expected to be completed until after the 2006 election" (p. 43). As a result, GAO found that "it is unclear when these initiatives will be available to assist state and local election officials" (p. 43). According to GAO, "Until these efforts are completed, there is a risk that many state and local jurisdictions will rely on voting systems that were not developed, acquired, tested, operated, or managed in accordance with rigorous security and reliability standards - potentially affecting the reliability of future elections and voter confidence in the accuracy of the vote count" (p. 53).

(Source)

View the full report here

View Article  Nothing Patriotic About It
  Nothing Patriotic About It

The following appeared as a Guest Opinion in the Iowa City Press-Citizen

by David Leshtz

The U.S. Congress will soon act to reauthorize expiring sections of the Patriot Act, the law passed just days after 9/11. At the time, few Americans were aware of the unprecedented expansion of the federal government's secret search and surveillance powers.

A conference committee is about to meet to reconcile two competing bills in Congress. The bill passed by the Senate takes important steps to restore checks and balances in our democratic process. It would help the courts have the facts necessary to prevent secret investigations of law-abiding Americans based on their beliefs. In contrast, the House bill would do little to correct the threats to our civil liberties found in the hastily passed Patriot Act.

For example, under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, the FBI can get an order from a secret court to collect personal information about American citizens without providing any facts linking us individually to a suspected foreign terrorist. This includes our medical records, hotel receipts, gun ownership records and the Web sites we visit.

The Senate bill, unlike the House bill, requires investigators to provide a statement of facts and some link between the person whose records are sought and a suspected terrorist. It gives businesses a more meaningful opportunity to challenge a records request, compared with the House bill. It also requires the FBI director to personally approve requests for library and bookstore records, medical histories and gun ownership records.

Reforms to Section 215 are especially necessary because the law contains a permanent gag order preventing the recipient from saying anything to anyone about the request for sensitive personal records.

The Patriot Act also allows for "sneak and peak" warrants, which allow investigators to get a court order to secretly search your home or business, download your computer files and seize your property without telling you for months or longer. Sneak and peak warrants are not limited to terrorism cases. The Justice Department recently admitted that since 9/11, 88 percent of sneak and peak searches conducted under this provision had nothing to do with terrorism.

The Senate bill limits to seven days the amount of time investigators can delay in telling you they searched your home or business. The House bill allows investigators to delay notification for six months, with extensions permitted.

As a member of the Iowa Civil Rights Commission, I am deeply worried. History demonstrates that unchecked law enforcement powers inevitably are used against those who are in the minority. FBI agents monitored civil rights leaders like the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and thousands of other Americans before laws were reformed to try to protect citizens from being spied upon for exercising their First Amendment freedoms.

One way this protection was enforced was to require the government to show to a court specific facts warranting surveillance. The Patriot Act stripped away this requirement for searches of personal records.

Members of Congress from both parties are currently circulating "Dear Conferee" letters asking lawmakers on the conference committee to support the reforms in the Senate bill, rather than the House bill which makes the Patriot Act worse.

Liberty and security

Voters in the 2nd District who care about our freedoms should urge Rep. Jim Leach to sign the Dear Conferee letter and support the gains made for our liberty and security in the Senate bill. Our congressman's leadership could help repair a piece of legislation that affects us all.

The checks and balances in our Constitution were designed to ensure that our government does not infringe on our fundamental freedoms. The Patriot Act seriously weakened these structural protections. We need to act now if we are to correct its worst excesses.

David Leshtz, a resident of Iowa City, has served on the Iowa Civil Rights Commission since 1999.

(source)

View Article  Who Is Harriet Miers?
Who Is Harriet Miers?


The official answer we hear is "we don't know" - from both sides of the aisle in the Senate - to the concern, really, of everyone.  Even George Will is now openly concerned about the Miers appointment to the point of opposition:


It is important that Miers not be confirmed unless, in her 61st year, she suddenly and unexpectedly is found to have hitherto undisclosed interests and talents pertinent to the court's role. Otherwise the sound principle of substantial deference to a president's choice of judicial nominees will dissolve into a rationalization for senatorial abdication of the duty to hold presidents to some standards of seriousness that will prevent them from reducing the Supreme Court to a private plaything useful for fulfilling whims on behalf of friends.


So - who will Harriet Miers be?

Will she be pro-choice?  Maybe, maybe not.  That's the essence of the tooth-gnashing going on at the moment, but we do know one thing about Miers:  she is a Bush loyalist, Texas Republican who will rule consistently in favor of whatever business interest rules the day:


And what, exactly, does business want? Overturning the New Deal? The Constitution in Exile? The return of God to the public schools? The end of affirmative action? Outlawing abortion once and for all? Squashing gays and lesbians underfoot? None of these things. What business wants is stability, comfort, predictability, and an agile, productive, submissive and demobilized population. It wants a powerful executive that can protect America's interests abroad. It wants a Congress freed from federal judicial oversight that is able to dish out the pork, jiggle the tax code and deregulate the economy according to its ever shifting concerns and interests. And it wants a Supreme Court that will give a pro-business President and a pro-business Congress a free hand, a Court that will protect the rights of employers over employees, advertisers over consumer groups, and corporations over environmentalists.

It wants, in short, someone very much like Harriet Miers.


The interests that promote people like Harriet Miers to such positions are not the social interests - they're the interests of the  Wal-Marters that are for the dissolution of government oversight, workplace safety regulation and union organization.

In other words, "a typical big business Republican".

Tom Frank is right again.

BFIA Writer's Guidelines

We welcome Submissions

Read Them On The Web

How To Post
A Comment On
BLOG FOR IOWA

How Your Kids Can Help Save the World

FreeKibble.com

FreeKibbleKat.com

Help end world hunger

Iowa Sites

AFSCME Iowa

Child & Family Policy Center - Iowa

Environment Iowa

Eyechanner Foundation

Genetic Engineering Action Network

Iowa Bicycle Coalition

Iowa Citizen Action Network - ICAN

Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement

Iowa Civil Liberties Union

Iowa Democratic Party

Iowa Energy Center

Iowa Environmental Council

Iowa Farmers Union

Iowa Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO

Iowa Fiscal Partnership

Iowans for Better Local TV

Iowa for Health Care

Iowa Freecycle

Iowa House Democrats

Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility

Iowa PIRG

Iowa Policy Project

Iowa Pride Network

Iowa Public Interest Research Group

Iowa Underground

Iowans for Voting Integrity

Left Coast of Iowa

Midwest Environmental Justice Advocates

One Iowa (GLBT)

Progressive Action for the Common Good

Progressive Coalition of Central Iowa

QCAD (Quad-Citians Affirming Diversity - GLBT)

Rapid Response - Iowa

SEIU Local 199

Sierra Club - Iowa Chapter

Soypower - West Central Soy

Voter-owned Iowa

Iowa Blogs

Bleeding Heartland

BlogNetNews Iowa

The Caucus Cooler

Century of the Common Iowan

The Deprogrammer (Quad Cities)

Diary of a Political Madman

Empire Falls Blog

Essential Estrogen

From Right to Left

Gavin's Journal

Green Tea Blog

Iowa Ennui

Iowa House Democrats

Iowa Independent

Iowa Liberal

Iowa Progress

Iowa Rapid Response

Iowa True Blue (Gordon Fischer's Blog)

Iowa Underground

Iowa Voters for Open and Transparent Elections

Jedi Tony

John Deeth's Blog

Krusty Konservative

Left Coast of Iowa Blog

Leftist Logic

Marshall County Democrats

Nick Johnson's Blog

Nussle and Flow

Political Fallout

Mike Palecek

Political Forecast

Politics in Iowa

Kay Henderson and Radio Iowa

The Rural Populist

Small Town Fun

Smoky Hollow

Southwest Iowa Guy

State 29

Steve King Watch

Straight Out of the Cornfield

Fight
Media Bias

Iowa

Rapid Response Network - Iowa

First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


Air America

*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


The Counterpoint

*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


National

FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media