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http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/15640536.htm>
E-voting raises new questions in Brazil
STAN LEHMAN
Associated Press
SAO PAULO, Brazil - Elections in Brazil used to be a monumental challenge, with millions of paper ballots to count by hand, many of them delivered by canoe and horseback from remote Amazon villages. Fraud was widespread, and it often took a week or more to determine the winners.....
"The voting machine is so secure that I would say the only way to tamper with it is to smash it with a hammer," Athayde Fontoura, general director of Brazil's Supreme Electoral Tribunal, said in an interview.
"The more you introduce paper into a voting system the more you introduce the possibility of fraud," said Michael Jacobsen, a Diebold spokesman. "Electronic voting is the most accurate and secure voting that is out there."
The last quote is the single biggest pile of stinky dog dung I have ever heard.