] On its own, Allen's experience seems easy to dismiss, but ] it's part of a pattern, the voting activists say, that ] reveals the voting industry's desire to keep people off. ] The worst transgression, one that almost everyone ] interviewed pointed to, occurred in a conference call on ] Sept. 16. The agenda for that meeting was sent to ] participants before the call, and it clearly states that ] the first order of business would be to approve new ] members, after which the committee would decide whether ] or not the draft standard was ready to be approved. The ] new members up for approval that day were Jim Adler, ] Alice Allen, Chuck Corry, David Dill, G.D. Miller, Ted ] Selker and Barbara Simons -- many of whom are in favor of ] verifiable audit trails in voting machines. ] ] But when people got on the phone that day, Vern Williams, ] a voting security expert at SAIC, an information ] technology consulting firm, suggested that the agenda be ] switched so that new members were approved after the ] committee voted on the draft standard -- a move that ] would ensure that the new members would have no say on ] the proposed standard. Williams' motion passed. Then the ] committee decided to open the draft standard for voting. ] And after that, the new members were approved. ] ] The activists were outraged at this maneuver. "I kept ] saying, 'We've been disenfranchised!'" says Simons, a ] computer scientist who worries about the security of ] electronic voting systems. Simons and others tried to ] reopen the vote on the standard, but one of the committee ] leaders then proposed a motion to adjourn the meeting. ] According to Roberts Rules of Order, an adjournment ] motion takes precedence over other motions. The motion ] won by one vote, and the meeting was adjourned. More stupid voting tricks from those who would have to significantly alter their software to make it secure. I have to wonder, though, if the systems are this insecure, how hard could it have been to put it in place initially? Come on, even webcam girls have polls on their websites. Anyway, it's another good look at how the good ol' boys club is trying to keep the status quo. Details of the IEEE Voting scandal... |