stillcool47 and kpete did a nice job on the Election Reform Thread today, but this article in particular, I thought was rather good. It is definitely worth a read! Nice find kpete!
A Technology Too Far
Internet Voting?
By Phil Keisling
Issue Date: 05.04.06
Touch-screen, computerized ballots -- officially known as Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) voting systems -- are not a way station to a glorious, all-Internet future for American democracy. They’re a technology cul-de-sac.
An election system should be accessible, simple, and efficient. But it must also be as secure, risk-free, and confidence-inducing as possible. Reacting to the Florida 2000 election debacle, Congress, through the Help America Vote Act, gave states nearly $3 billion to update their election systems. Great idea. But paper ballots generally -- chads or no -- were deemed suspect. The future of elections, we were told, lay in sophisticated software and user-friendly touchscreens.
For purveyors of expensive, new-fangled election machinery, it was a marketing godsend. For many election officials, federally funded DREs offered an intoxicating vision of elections too precise to be controversial.
Today, this once-bright vision of paperless voting is unraveling. In 2002 and 2004, vexing problems in state after state ran the gamut from lost and miscounted ballots to malfunctioning machines. Diebold, a major DRE manufacturer, inadvertently published its programmers’ source code, betraying not only a serious security breech, but laughably easy-to-hack code.
>more
http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&name=ViewPrint&articleId=11420Check out the thread today for more interesting articles, and I'm sure they'd appreciate some recommendations, too!
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x425322