So I find out that Georgia has signed a $15 million contract with Diebold to provide the "ExpressPoll 4000 Electronic Poll Book. Doesn't really sound too scary. But in reading the press release (from last October), I start to get nervous.
"The ExpressPoll unit will also automate the time-consuming and expensive capture of voter history information, dramatically reducing the cost of manually entering this data in the state registration system following each election."
What data are they capturing?
And also:
"In addition, the ExpressPoll-4000 will be used in Georgia precincts to create voter access cards used by each voter to activate the Diebold touch-screen voting stations. The ExpressPoll-4000 will identify the correct ballot style for each voter based on stored information from voter registration files, further automating and refining the voter check-in process."
So it looks like the same database contains all your registration information, as well as your voting hsitory (including whether you select a D or R ballot in a primary), as well as create an access card.
First of all, I would think we would want the voter history information kept separate from the creation of ballot access cards. That is going to be a huge temptation for somebody to manipulate.
Secondly, it opens up the whole 'nother can of worms about transparency. What does the software look like? Who wrote it? Who has access to it? Is it certified? How are updates handled? If this unit "networkable"? How are the poll workers being trained? What is the procedure for data-entry error correction? Are the units password protected? Can they be "sealed"? Is there an activity log?
The big obvious danger I see is that the same unit that creates your ballot access card also "knows" how you may have voted in the primary. I don't like that.
Here's the press release:
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=106584&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=774350&highlight=