This is a start, but I'd like to see an actual configuration guide too. The following is most illuminating however and should be sent to Conyers, et al:
From:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0309/S00157.htmComments added without quotes:
This is version 1.0. It's old (Oct. 2002), but it probably was valid for the 2002 election.
Sect. 5. Election day:
"Remember that 'undervoting' in industry is generally considered to be no candidate selection or less candidates selected than the number to vote for, while we consider undervoting to be the latter only."
Does this mean they don't consider no vote for President an undervote? It's not clear but the word "only" might imply this. Of course if the number to vote for is "1", then "0" could be considered an undervote. It's poorly written and ambiguous. It could affect how undervotes are recorded and reported to the media, etc.
Sect. 5.1. AccuVote-TS (DRE):
"If a straight party race has been defined,
all candidate selections made prior to straight party selection will be lost on the ballot, unless the Pennsylvania Straight Party Voting option was selected in GEMS."
This is HUGE! Could this be why Kerry was able to win PA? They have their own straight ticket option, actually named after the state! I'd imagine there are some Diebold DREs there. There were many complaints about not being able to vote for President on straight party tickets.
"In order to change the candidate selection on the ballot, the voter must first touch the candidate again on the AccuVote-TS ballot before making another selection, unless the One Click Vote option was selected in GEMS."
While this is shown on the demo on their website with clear instructions, some may have trouble with it and since there is more than one option, it may not be programmed the same way on every machine. Poll workers trained on this method may screw up votes if some machines are set up with the other option, esp. if they are not computer savvy.
5.1.1. Recuperation:
Suffice it say that when these machines fail, there is ample room for human error in the repair process. And now WARNING! about the possible loss of votes, democracy, etc!
7. Early voting closing:
Here's why I'm against this scam!
"Early voting will have been completed by election day. At election close, the election must be ended on early voting memory cards, be they AccuVote-TS or AccuVote-OS, prior to uploading. The reason for this is that ending the election will also automatically tally results, which is illegal prior to election close."
In other words, you shouldn't tally the early votes until Nov 2 after the polls close. But in order to actually do this, and have the early votes count, you have to END the Early Voting election on their separate memory cards. Another opportunity to screw up the process! The cards sit around for days or weeks, subject to whatever tampering may occur, theft, static discharge, corruption, erasure, etc. And if someone neglects to add those votes on Nov. 2, they are gone forever.
And there's more:
"Early voting memory cards may be uploaded prior to polling vote centers. In order for this to occur, enough time must be available to end the election, print the Election Totals tape, then upload. The early voting Election Totals report may include every precinct in the election, and therefore be both extremely lengthy and time-consuming to print. In this case, numerous voting devices may be set aside to end the election and print paper tapes, while one unit only may be used to upload early voting results to the GEMS host computer, either directly or over a LAN connection."
So you have to CLOSE the election on each card, and then upload the results to the tabulator. Piece of cake right? NOT!
The rest of the manual refers to the Optical Scan machines, but since these have voter-verified paper ballots, while problematic, they are much less likely to be fraudulent.
I have to go now, but keep this kicked for Teddy from Conyers' staff.
I'll send it to him later if he's around.
Let's keep researching this stuff!