Cleveland Indy Media Center cleveland indymedia
About Us Contact Us Subscribe Calendar Radio Show Publish
white themeblack themered themeblack themeblack themeblack themeblack themeblack themeblack themeblack themetheme help


Dec 4 Special Showing of film “Rethink Afghanistan”

Dec 12 West Shore Film Series to host film “Preacher’s So

Add an Event





printable version - email this article

View article without comments

Diebold under fire for faulty voting machines
by kris Sunday December 28, 2003 at 09:15 PM

Diebold, a Northeast Ohio corporation, is coming under heavy fire for its manufacturing of electronic voting machines.

Diebold under fire for faulty voting machines

Diebold, a Northeast Ohio corporation, is coming under heavy fire for its manufacturing of electronic voting machines. Aside from ethical concerns about black box voting (hacking at the polls, lack of a paper trail, etc...) Diebold also holds the distinction of being accused of price-gouging Maryland tax payers. As if these weren't enough woes for the company, their president (a Republican) recently stated that he "look[s] forward to delivering Ohio's votes to the president in 2004."

transcript from a Democracy Now interview

add your comments


my comments
by kris Sunday December 28, 2003 at 11:58 PM

I find it odd that elections are becoming electronic in an age when elections themselves are becoming irrelevant. 2000 shows us that our votes aren't very relevant. So why should we care about 2004? Perhaps the voting machines are reason...or maybe we shouldn't think we count.

add your comments


More Diebold News related to Indymedia
by L.Ross Monday December 29, 2003 at 07:45 PM

USA: REPRESSION: Indymedia fights Diebold's legal attempt to silence discussions about e-voting

(from Global Indymedia): Documents are publicly available that detail vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines manufactured by the Diebold Corporation. Diebold has been sending cease and desist letters to internet service providers (ISPs) that host the documents or links to them. Numerous Indymedia servers have been targeted by Diebold in its campaign to suppress this critical information. Indymedia will defend its right to post internal memos and documents detailing vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines manufactured by the Diebold Corporation.

add your comments


More IMC related Diebold information
by L.Ross Monday December 29, 2003 at 07:48 PM

Diebold Warns on Electronic Voting Papers
Mon Oct 27,10:44 PM ET Add Technology - AP to My Yahoo!
By RACHEL KONRAD, Associated Press Writer

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Despite lawsuit threats from one of the nation's largest electronic voting machine suppliers, some activists are refusing to remove from Web sites internal company documents that they claim raise serious security questions. Diebold Inc. sent "cease and desist" letters after the documents and internal e-mails, allegedly stolen by a hacker, were distributed on the Internet. Recipients of the letters included computer programmers, students at colleges including Swarthmore and at least one Internet provider. Most of the 13,000 pages of documents are little more than banal employee e-mails, routine software manuals and old voter record files. But several items appear to raise security concerns. Diebold refused to discuss the documents' contents. Company spokesman Mike Jacobsen said the fact that the company sent the cease-and-desist letters does not mean the documents are authentic — or give credence to advocates who claim lax Diebold security could allow hackers to rig machines.
"We're cautioning anyone from drawing wrong or incomplete conclusions about any of those documents or files purporting to be authentic," Jacobsen said. But the activists say the mere fact that Diebold was hacked shows that the company's technology cannot be trusted. "These legal threats are an acknowledgment of the horrific security risks of electronic voting," said Sacramento-based programmer Jim March, who received a cease and desist order last month but continues to publish the documents on his personal Web site. In one series of e-mails, a senior engineer dismisses concern from a lower-level programmer who questions why the company lacked certification for a customized operating system used in touch-screen voting machines. The Federal Election Commission (news - web sites) requires voting software to be certified by an independent research lab. In another e-mail, a Diebold executive scolded programmers for leaving software files on an Internet site without password protection.
"This potentially gives the software away to whomever wants it," the manager wrote in the e-mail. March contends the public has a right to know about Diebold security problems. "The cease-and-desist orders are like a drug dealer saying, 'Hey, cop, give me back my crack.' It's an incredible tactical blunder," he said.
The documents began appearing online in August, six months after a hacker broke into the North Canton, Ohio-based company's servers using an employee's ID number, Jacobsen said. The hacker copied company announcements, software bulletins and internal e-mails dating back to January 1999, Jacobsen said.
In August, someone e-mailed the data to electronic-voting activists, many of whom published stories on their Web logs and personal sites. A freelance journalist at Wired News, Brian McWilliams, also received data and wrote about it in an online story. The data was further distributed in digital form around the Internet and it is not known how many copies exist. Wendy Seltzer, an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said she has been contacted by about a dozen groups that received cease-and-desist letters. Among them is Online Policy Group, a nonprofit ISP that hosts the San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center, which published links to the data.
Seltzer encouraged them to defy the Diebold cease-and-desist letters. "There is a strong fair-use defense," Seltzer said. "People are using these documents to talk about the very mechanism of democracy — how the votes are counted. It's at the heart of what the First Amendment protects." Although Seltzer believes Diebold's legal case to be weak, she worries about a chilling effect. Angered last week after Swarthmore College told them they could not link to the documents from college-sponsored sites, some students at the liberal arts school near Philadelphia found Internet providers abroad to host the content. Others took down the offending material at their dean's request, but they promised to put the documents back online if Diebold doesn't provide a more detailed explanation within two weeks. Branen Salmon, 22, president of the Swarthmore College Computer Society, said Diebold's threats put the documents in the spotlight. "A week ago, this was still a murmur," Salmon said last Thursday. "Now this is front page stuff that people are talking about."

add your comments


Where To Write/Call/Protest
by Jane Monday January 26, 2004 at 06:20 PM


Home address of Diebold CEO Walden W. O'Dell:

2427 Tremont Rd.
Columbus, OH 43221-3725

Home phone number:

614-486-9027

add your comments


e-VOTE
by Voter Thursday March 25, 2004 at 12:26 AM


let's stick with punch cards...less chance of fraud.

add your comments


Primusn Networks
by Bobby Sunday April 04, 2004 at 08:02 PM

Primus Networks (Austin TX) has repeatedly not paid employees their commissions and promised bonuses. Primus Networks is in arrears with their creditors requiring upfront payment for every order. Employees are currently asking if this situation is caused by Trent Doucet’s (President) cocaine problem. Stay tuned as this situation is only going to get worse. If you are thinking about working for Primus Networks you should really ask yourself if you are working to get paid or working to get ripped off. If you are thinking about hiring Primus Networks you should look to your other options. Trent Doucet is not to be trusted.


http://www.primusnetworks.com

add your comments


IMC Network: www.indymedia.org Projects print radio satellite tv video Africa ambazonia canarias estrecho / madiaq nigeria south africa Canada hamilton maritimes montreal ontario ottawa quebec thunder bay vancouver victoria windsor winnipeg East Asia burma jakarta japan manila qc Europe alacant andorra antwerpen armenia athens austria barcelona belarus belgium belgrade bristol bulgaria croatia cyprus estrecho / madiaq euskal herria galiza germany grenoble hungary ireland istanbul italy la plana liege lille madrid malta marseille nantes netherlands nice norway oost-vlaanderen paris/île-de-france poland portugal romania russia scotland sverige switzerland thessaloniki toulouse ukraine united kingdom valencia west vlaanderen Latin America argentina bolivia brasil chiapas chile chile sur colombia ecuador mexico peru puerto rico qollasuyu rosario santiago tijuana uruguay valparaiso Oceania adelaide aotearoa brisbane burma darwin jakarta manila melbourne oceania perth qc sydney South Asia india mumbai United States arizona arkansas atlanta austin baltimore big muddy binghamton boston buffalo charlottesville chicago cleveland colorado danbury, ct dc hawaii houston hudson mohawk idaho ithaca kansas city la madison maine miami michigan milwaukee minneapolis/st. paul new hampshire new jersey new mexico new orleans north carolina north texas nyc oklahoma omaha philadelphia pittsburgh portland richmond rochester rogue valley saint louis san diego san francisco san francisco bay area santa barbara santa cruz, ca seattle tallahassee-red hills tampa bay tennessee united states urbana-champaign utah vermont virginia beach western mass worcester West Asia armenia beirut israel palestine ukraine Topics biotech Process discussion fbi/legal updates indymedia faq mailing lists process & imc docs tech volunteer

© 2000-2006 Cleveland Indy Media Center. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the Cleveland Indy Media Center. Running sf-active v0.9.4 Disclaimer | Privacy