] A wealthy businessman helping the Ohio Republican Party ] try to win the state in 2004 for President Bush also is ] the head of a company competing for a state contract to ] sell voting machines. ] ] Walden O'Dell, chief executive of Diebold Inc., told ] Republicans in an Aug. 14 fund-raising letter that he is ] ``committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes ] to the president next year.'' Watch the bouncing ball here. The mainstream press has widely discredited the security analysis of the Diebold's machines because the person that performed it is on the board at a competing company. On the other hand, there is hardly a peep about this. There are 9 links on google news from 6 outlets, 4 small local news stations, and two leftist journals. Want undeniable proof of press culpability, compare a google news search for "Walden O'Dell" with "Avi Rubin votehere" Not all of the Avi Rubin stories are critical, but we're talking about 63 to 9 here. Furthermore, consider the impact that the blaster worm stories have had on the American mindset. We may not say "this kid created the blaster worm" but we build that association in your head anyway. The AJC: "Furor over the report was partly defused when the lead researcher acknowledged this week that he failed to disclose that he had stock options in VoteHere, a company that competes with Diebold in the voting-software market, and was a member of VoteHere's technical advisory board." From ABC: Diebold officials said they were "shocked and disappointed" by Rubin's admissions. "Diebold Election Systems has consistently questioned the conclusions drawn by the Johns Hopkins-issued report," the company said in a statement. "It is now clear, by Mr. Rubin's own admission, that questions of bias must be considered." Diebold appears to have conflict |