http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/09/business/yourmoney/09vote.html?ex=1069435454&ei=1&en=c27a71244043916e
Published on Sunday, November
9, 2003 by The New York Times
Machine Politics in the Digital Age
By MELANIE WARNER
IN mid-August, Walden W.
O'Dell, the chief executive of Diebold Inc., sat down
at his computer to compose a letter inviting 100 wealthy and politically
inclined friends to a Republican Party fund-raiser, to be held at his home in a
suburb of
That is hardly unusual for
Mr. O'Dell. A longtime Republican, he is a member of President Bush's
"Rangers and Pioneers,'' an elite group of loyalists who have raised at least
$100,000 each for the 2004 race.
But it is not the only way
that Mr. O'Dell is involved in the election process. Through Diebold Election Systems, a subsidiary in
Judging from Federal Election
Commission data, at least eight million people will cast their ballots using Diebold machines next November. That is 8 percent of the
number of people who voted in 2000, and includes all voters in the states of
Some people find Mr. O'Dell's
pairing of interests – as voting-machine magnate and devoted Republican
fund-raiser - troubling. To skeptics, including more than a few Democrats, it
raises at least the appearance of an ethical problem. Some of the chatter on
the Internet goes so far as to suggest that he could use his own machines to
sway the election.
Senator Jon Corzine, Democrat of New Jersey, does not buy such
conspiracy theories, but he said he was appalled at the situation.
"It's outrageous,"
he said. "Not only does Mr. O'Dell want the contract to provide every
voting machine in the nation for the next election - he wants to 'deliver' the
election to Mr. Bush. There are enough conflicts in this story to fill an
ethics manual."
Mr. O'Dell declined to be
interviewed for this article, but a company official said that his political
affiliations had nothing to do with Diebold's
operations, and that the company derived the bulk of its revenue from A.T.M.'s, not voting machines. "This is not Diebold; this is Wally O'Dell personally," said Thomas
W. Swidarski, senior vice president for strategic
development and global marketing at Diebold, who
works closely with Mr. O'Dell. "The issue has been misconstrued."
BUT the controversy
surrounding Diebold goes beyond its chief executive's
political activities. In July, professors at
rigorous software engineering discipline" and that "cryptography,
when used at all, is used incorrectly."
Making matters worse, the
software code for the machines was discovered in January by a Seattle-area
writer on a publicly accessible Internet site. That the code was unprotected
constitutes a significant security lapse by Diebold,
said Aviel D. Rubin, an associate professor of
computer science at Johns Hopkins, co-author of the study of
the code.
Mr. Swidarski
said the code on the Internet site was outdated and was not now in use in
machines.
About 15,000 internal Diebold e-mail messages also found their way to the
Internet. Some referred to software patches installed on Diebold
machines days before elections. Others indicated that the Microsoft Access database
used in Diebold's tabulation servers was not
protected by passwords. Diebold,
which says passwords are now installed on machines, is threatening legal action
against anyone who posts the files or links to them, contending that the e-mail
is copyrighted.
A recent report for the state
of
The company seized upon this
as evidence that its systems, if used properly, were secure. But the report's
overall assessment was not particularly upbeat. "The system, as implemented
in policy, procedure and technology, is at high risk of compromise," SAIC
wrote.
It has been a bumpy couple of
months for Mr. O'Dell, 58, who is known as Wally and spent 33 years at Emerson Electric
before joining what is now Diebold Election Systems.
Associates say he was stunned by the reaction to his August letter and now
regrets writing it.
"Wally's going to take a
lower profile on this stuff," Mr. Swidarski
said. But Mr. Swidarski did not indicate that Mr. O'Dell
would put a halt to all of his political activities. Those have included
attendance at a Bush fund-raiser in
August for a Pioneers and
Rangers meeting attended by the president.
Other Diebold
executives have contributed to President Bush's re-election campaign. According
to data reported to the Federal Election Commission, 11 executives have added a
total of $22,000 to the president's campaign coffers this year. No money from Diebold or its executives has gone to Democratic
presidential candidates this year.
The controversy over security
has started to affect Diebold's business. Last week,
the office of the
soured election officials' perceptions of computerized voting.
"We were already not strongly in favor of it, but the whole problem has
changed when you're getting e-mails every week saying, 'You're not going to do
this, right?' " said Kevin J. Kennedy, director
of
board.
Matt Summerville, an analyst
at McDonald Investments in
So far, investors have not
seemed concerned. Diebold's stock is up almost 36
percent for the year.
Until recently, Diebold's voting business looked extremely promising.
Analysts say the biggest
beneficiaries of the federal dollars are likely to be Diebold,
Election Systems & Software in
the election process, though most of that has yet to be spent.
An additional $830 million is waiting to be disbursed as soon as a new national
oversight committee for elections is established.
NOT everyone is convinced
that spending hundreds of millions of dollars to computerize the nation's
voting is a good thing. The Johns Hopkins and SAIC reports are part of a
growing chorus of criticism about the reliability and safety of paperless
voting systems.
"There's a feeling in
the computer scientist community of utter dismay about the state of
voting-machine technology," said Douglas W. Jones, an associate professor
of computer science at the
David L. Dill, a computer
science professor at Stanford, said: "If I was a programmer at one of
these companies and I wanted to steal an election, it would be very easy. I could
put something in the software that would be impossible for people to detect,
and it would change the votes from one party to another. And you could do it so
it's not going to show up statistically as an anomaly.''
Diebold says there are enough checks and balances in the system
to catch this. "Programmers do not set up the elections; election officials
do," Mr. Swidarski said. "All a programmer
knows are numbers, which are not assigned to real people and parties until
set-up time."
But Professor Dill says the
inherent complexity of software code makes it nearly impossible to ensure that
computerized elections are fair. He advocates that machines be required to
print out a paper ballot, which voters can use to verify their selections and
which will serve as an audit trail in the event of irregularities or recounts.
Touch-screen machines from Diebold, called AccuVotes, do not
have such a "voter verified" paper trail. ES&S and Sequoia are
working on prototypes for machines with printers. Diebold's
machines are like A.T.M.'s, in that voters touch
their selection and hit "enter" to record their votes onto memory
cards inside each terminal. After voting has ended, the memory cards are
inserted into a Diebold server at each precinct. The
results are tabulated and sent by modem, or the data disks are sent to a
central office.
Rebecca Mercuri,
a computer scientist and president of the consulting firm Notable Software, who
has been studying election systems for 14 years, says the trouble with this system
is that it is secretive. It prohibits anyone from knowing whether the data
coming out of the terminals
represents what voters actually selected. If someone were to
challenge election results, the data in memory cards and the software running
the voting terminals could be examined only by Diebold
representatives.
MS. MERCURI ran up against
this last year, when she served as a consultant in a contested city council
election in
"These companies are
basically saying 'trust us,' " Ms. Mercuri said."Why should anybody trust them? That's not the
way democracy is supposed to work."
Representative Rush D. Holt,
Democrat of New Jersey, is leading an effort to make computerized voting more transparent.
His bill, introduced this year, would require that computerized voting systems
produce a voter-verified paper ballot and that the software code be publicly available.
The bill, in the House
Administration Committee, has 60 co-sponsors, all Democrats.
"Someone said to me the
other day, 'We've had these electronic voting machines for several years now
and we've never had a problem.' And I said, 'How do you know?' and he couldn't
answer that," Representative Holt said. "The job of verification
shouldn't belong to the company; it should belong to the voter."
Diebold said it would be willing to attach ballot printers to
touch-screen machines if customers wanted them. But Mr. Swidarski
said elections boards were not clamoring for it.
"We're agnostic to
it," he said.
Mr. Swidarski
disputed the assertion that Diebold's systems are
vulnerable to tampering. Before each election, he said, the software goes
through rigorous testing and certification by one of three companies contracted
through the National Association of State Election Directors. Those
companies "go through every line of code," he said.
"It's an extensive process that takes several months, and then the
machines go for testing at the state level."
Critics say that the
certification process is not as thorough as the companies would have people
believe, and that the resulting reports, like the technology, are not available
for public inspection. This opacity is what worries detractors most.
"We know from Enron and
WorldCom that when accounting is weak, crooks have been known to take
over," Professor Jones said. "If vulnerabilities exist in any voting
system for a long enough time, someone's going to exploit it."
Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
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