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January 23, 2007
"SF TECH EXPERTS TO STUDY ELECTRONIC VOTING"
"The Department of Elections in San Francisco is enlisting software and system security experts in the community to tackle the question of ensuring the integrity of electronic voting.
A task force announced recently is being created to review source code -- the technical language that amounts to a recipe for a computer program -- in its application to electronic voting machines.
Like other local governments across the nation, San Francisco has paid private vendors to provide electronic voting machines.
Though the machines' computer interfaces have generally won acclaim for voter ease-of-use, problems have sprung up with reports of machines not operating properly, or election results that may have been tipped by faulty collection of actual voter preferences.
The manufacturers of voting machines have resisted the public release of the source code underlying their technology, citing security and proprietary information concerns.
The balance sought by the Department of Elections is between transparency -- making sure a voting system is on the level and operational -- and security from tampering.
The task force will also be asked to provide a security analysis of San Francisco's voting system and report on its recommendations."
The story is here.
Posted by Randy Riddle at January 23, 2007 09:44 AM
