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Edwards,Leggett,Raskin,Elrich...let's get them elected!
Linked to groups: Democracy for Montgomery County
Greetings to all Democracy for Montgomery County members! We are now in the final 10 days before a major primary election which has the potential to significantly alter politics in our region. A few weeks ago, DFMC members endorsed 4 candidates in the primaries:Donna Edwards, Ike Leggett, Jamie Raskin, and Marc Elrich
If you have not already done so, NOW is the time to get actively involved in these campaigns. All the campaigns are in need of volunteers for phonebanking, canvassing and election day work at this point.
Please contact one of the people below if you are not already hooked in to one of these campaigns, but would like to be:
DO IT NOW - the primary is only 10 days away!
1) for Donna Edwards:
Rachael Lemberg at rlemberg01@comcast.net (Silver Spring region) 240-277-1292
Joe Corbett at corbett9@bellatlantic.net (Olney) 301-774-3941
Sharon Polidoro at sepolidoro@yahoo.com (Germantown) 301-540-3371
2) for Ike Leggett: Greg Montross at gmontross@gmail.com, or at 504-782-8585
3) for Jamie Raskin: Gina Angiola at gina@raskin06.com or 240-620-1486
4) for Marc Elrich: Mara Parker at maraparker@att.net
Thanks much!!!!
May 20th, 6-8 p.m.,Taking Back MD with Jesse Jackson Jr. and Jamie Raskin
Linked to groups: Democracy for Montgomery County
Democracy for Montgomery County has joined with several other grassroots groups to co-host this historic event: a true TOWN HALL MEETING with Jesse Jackson Jr. and State Senate candidate Jamie Raskin.A major part of our mission as DFMC is to encourage all citizens to become more actively involved in the political process. This event is the perfect opportunity to bring new faces into our movement. Please spread the word far and wide and encourage everyone you know to come participate in this Town Hall meeting at Springbrook High School, Saturday, May 20th, 6-8 p.m. It's free. Voter registration tables will be set up, along with campaign volunteer tables.
Let's make this huge! Sign on at: www.dfalink.com/event.php?id=817...
Hope to see you all Saturday!
Gina Angiola
DFMC host
Raskin campaign volunteer
OpEd on verifiable voting in Balt. Sun by DFA member John Schneider
Linked to groups: Democracy for Montgomery County
http://tinyurl.com/kfygwFrom the Baltimore Sun
Touch-screen voting isn't the right answer
By John Schneider
March 31, 2006
A debate over the use of electronic voting machines in Maryland generally has focused on words such as "security," "interpretive code" and "hacking."
The arguments tend to pit the reliability and safety of one machine against the other and compare the veracity and experience of expert vs. expert. They are earnestly written, articulately defended and, in many cases, factually accurate.
Unfortunately, they are also largely beside the point.
This isn't surprising: There are powerful commercial and political interests vying for the upper hand, with much prestige and profit at stake. Still, the debate has been incorrectly framed, and voters are the poorer for it.
The problem is this: When discussing the integrity of any data storage, processing and retrieval system, the term "secure" is a misnomer. In the realm of computer science, there is no such standard, no such definition. One can only describe the precautions taken and the recovery plan if the system is breached.
More simply, all computer systems can be rigged or manipulated. It is never a question of "if," only of time or money and the potential payoff. That's why computer science regards security as a process, not a feature. This process has several integral parts, which include multiple layers of intrusion detection and prevention, alerting and, most important, a means to recover from a security failure.
The last point has been lost in the debate and needs to be reintroduced. As much as we would like to believe assurances that our machines are infallible (because most of us don't have the experience to determine this ourselves), we will have given up the right to know whether our vote was true if our recovery plan consists solely of trusting the technology masters.
So let's talk about a responsible recovery plan.
We first heard terms such as "dimpled ballots" and "hanging chads" in the fateful presidential election of 2000 in Florida. A near-panic ensued, leading the nation to an almost instant decision to radically alter a voting method that had persisted since the Colonial era: the elimination of a voter-prepared physical record - the paper ballot.
Instead, we decided to accept an electronic interpretation of the vote we cast, using machines we don't really understand.
Most everyone agrees that the simplest recovery plan consists of adding a so-called paper trail, which allows voters to confirm their electronic choices by referring to a physical, printed record. If machine problems lead to a recount, paper allows one to take place.
But in this case of recording and verifying a vote, not all paper is created equal. "Paper trail" has been used to describe everything from a continuous-feed roll under glass to a hand-prepared ballot.
In unanimously passing a recent voting machine bill, the Maryland House of Delegates accepted the idea of a paper record that captures individual votes. The Senate has not adopted the same proposal and may be heading toward a system that has serious limitations. For example, some senators seem to favor using individual touch-screen machines with paper-under-glass verification. After casting their votes, the voter peers through the glass at the paper printout and confirms the list as accurate.
It sounds easy, but "live" voters have difficulty reading small type, comparing as many as a dozen or more votes, and too often find it easier to just skip the verification effort. And even after that, machine-printed records are still subject to security problems. In short, this brand of paper trail provides little assurance that the voter's intent has been captured and confirmed, and introduces an administrative nightmare.
A House proposal requires a voter-prepared ballot, optically read by a scanner in the voting precinct and backed by a second accessible reader. After the ballot is read, the original paper record remains for a later recount, prepared by the voter's own hand.
Optical-scan machines require the voter to darken spaces on a paper ballot and then take the ballot to a scanner, where it is fed into the machine and read for tabulation. These ballots are retained inside the scanner, where they become a part of the permanent record of the election. Only one scanner is required for each polling location, plus a second unit that's accessible for people with disabilities.
The key difference between touch-screen voting and the optical scanner is that only the scanned system leaves behind an actual record prepared by the voter's hand and therefore is not "hackable" in the event a recount is necessary.
An added bonus with an optical-screening system is that it relies on far fewer machines and can be purchased with the residual value that lies in our current inventory of touch-screen machines. Net cost: about zero. Net gain: renewed confidence in our electoral process. A priceless benefit, at a fair price.
John Schneider is a consultant on Internet and data security. His e-mail is aivset@yahoo.com.
Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun | Get Sun home delivery
Op-Ed on verifiable voting in Baltimore Sun by our own John Schneider
Linked to groups: Democracy for Maryland
http://tinyurl.com/kfygwFrom the Baltimore Sun
Touch-screen voting isn't the right answer
By John Schneider
March 31, 2006
A debate over the use of electronic voting machines in Maryland generally has focused on words such as "security," "interpretive code" and "hacking."
The arguments tend to pit the reliability and safety of one machine against the other and compare the veracity and experience of expert vs. expert. They are earnestly written, articulately defended and, in many cases, factually accurate.
Unfortunately, they are also largely beside the point.
This isn't surprising: There are powerful commercial and political interests vying for the upper hand, with much prestige and profit at stake. Still, the debate has been incorrectly framed, and voters are the poorer for it.
The problem is this: When discussing the integrity of any data storage, processing and retrieval system, the term "secure" is a misnomer. In the realm of computer science, there is no such standard, no such definition. One can only describe the precautions taken and the recovery plan if the system is breached.
More simply, all computer systems can be rigged or manipulated. It is never a question of "if," only of time or money and the potential payoff. That's why computer science regards security as a process, not a feature. This process has several integral parts, which include multiple layers of intrusion detection and prevention, alerting and, most important, a means to recover from a security failure.
The last point has been lost in the debate and needs to be reintroduced. As much as we would like to believe assurances that our machines are infallible (because most of us don't have the experience to determine this ourselves), we will have given up the right to know whether our vote was true if our recovery plan consists solely of trusting the technology masters.
So let's talk about a responsible recovery plan.
We first heard terms such as "dimpled ballots" and "hanging chads" in the fateful presidential election of 2000 in Florida. A near-panic ensued, leading the nation to an almost instant decision to radically alter a voting method that had persisted since the Colonial era: the elimination of a voter-prepared physical record - the paper ballot.
Instead, we decided to accept an electronic interpretation of the vote we cast, using machines we don't really understand.
Most everyone agrees that the simplest recovery plan consists of adding a so-called paper trail, which allows voters to confirm their electronic choices by referring to a physical, printed record. If machine problems lead to a recount, paper allows one to take place.
But in this case of recording and verifying a vote, not all paper is created equal. "Paper trail" has been used to describe everything from a continuous-feed roll under glass to a hand-prepared ballot.
In unanimously passing a recent voting machine bill, the Maryland House of Delegates accepted the idea of a paper record that captures individual votes. The Senate has not adopted the same proposal and may be heading toward a system that has serious limitations. For example, some senators seem to favor using individual touch-screen machines with paper-under-glass verification. After casting their votes, the voter peers through the glass at the paper printout and confirms the list as accurate.
It sounds easy, but "live" voters have difficulty reading small type, comparing as many as a dozen or more votes, and too often find it easier to just skip the verification effort. And even after that, machine-printed records are still subject to security problems. In short, this brand of paper trail provides little assurance that the voter's intent has been captured and confirmed, and introduces an administrative nightmare.
A House proposal requires a voter-prepared ballot, optically read by a scanner in the voting precinct and backed by a second accessible reader. After the ballot is read, the original paper record remains for a later recount, prepared by the voter's own hand.
Optical-scan machines require the voter to darken spaces on a paper ballot and then take the ballot to a scanner, where it is fed into the machine and read for tabulation. These ballots are retained inside the scanner, where they become a part of the permanent record of the election. Only one scanner is required for each polling location, plus a second unit that's accessible for people with disabilities.
The key difference between touch-screen voting and the optical scanner is that only the scanned system leaves behind an actual record prepared by the voter's hand and therefore is not "hackable" in the event a recount is necessary.
An added bonus with an optical-screening system is that it relies on far fewer machines and can be purchased with the residual value that lies in our current inventory of touch-screen machines. Net cost: about zero. Net gain: renewed confidence in our electoral process. A priceless benefit, at a fair price.
John Schneider is a consultant on Internet and data security. His e-mail is aivset@yahoo.com.
Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun | Get Sun home delivery
Voter-verified paper trail passes in the House!
Linked to groups: Democracy for Maryland
HB 244, the critical voter-verified paper trail legislation we've all been fighting for, passed today in the House of Delegates with a key amendment (the Hixson-Bobo amendment)mandating the lease of OptiScan machines for use in the 2006 primaries and general election! The governor has stated publicly that he supports this legislation. Now is the time to get our senators to commit to passing this same legislation (SB 713)...immediately! Please contact your senator, as well as Sen. Paula Hollinger and Sen. President Mike Miller, and let them know we are counting on them to provide voters with OptiScan machines in time for this year's election. To find legislators: http://mdelect.net.
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