Justice Department Decides To Break Up E-Voting Company
from the how-about-just-opening-the-source-code? dept
As was rumored at the end of last year, the US Justice Department has decided to break up Election Systems & Software (ES&S), the dominant e-voting provider in the country. You may recall that just a few months earlier, ES&S (who has a long and troubled history of inaccurate, buggy and insecure e-voting machines) had purchased the remains of Diebold's e-voting business for just $5 million. Of course, Diebold also had a long and troubled history of inaccurate, buggy and insecure e-voting machines, so the two made a perfect match. In both cases, the companies relied on security by stonewalling -- insisting that nothing was wrong, despite lots of proof to the contrary, and refusing to let third party security experts ever look at their machines. Rather than breaking up the companies, why don't the feds just require that any e-voting machine use open source software that can be tested by anyone?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: antitrust, e-voting, justice department
Companies: diebold, es&s, premier
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Open Source For Security ...
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the constitution does not mention capitalism.
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(number totally made up on the spot because i needed one for the line, also possibly foolishness or ignorance should replace Idiocy, but it usually Looks more like Idiocy, and only listing one is snappier. I'm also not the Spanish Inquisition.)
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If you can't be bothered to at least explain outlandish statements, it's a waste of your time posting them and a waste of our time reading them.
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Never Trust the Government
From the Article
The department proposed a settlement that, if accepted, would dissolve the merger and force ES&S to sell its Premier business to a buyer approved by the Justice Department.
Read: "A buyer that the Justice Department controls". As true and bothersome as the security issues are with these systems, this is all about the government gaining control over it's own voting system to make it easier to fix elections.
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Re: Never Trust the Government
We already use cryptography when we online bank and, frankly, if you know the servers correct public key and your computer (and the servers computer) is not compromised with malware then transmitting information to the intended recipient via https is safer than doing so via the phone (being that there is no encryption via the phone and so an eavesdropper working for the phone company can potentially listen in on your conversation. Also, don't use cordless phones since they don't usually provide encryption either).
If we use the best cryptographic algorithms we have and use the most secure keys possible (ie: largest) then I don't see them being cracked anytime soon. Perhaps 15 - 20 years from now we may need to update the algorithms (as a precaution) to a more modern and secure algorithms to ensure that future generations don't crack the current algorithm and use it against a future generation. But that's fine, we'll update the algorithm every once in a while perhaps.
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