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Information Technology Association of America s Election Technology Council Electronic Voting: Every Vote Counts Mi

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Information Technology Association of America s Election Technology Council Electronic Voting: Every Vote Counts Mi

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    2. ITAA 350 plus member trade association Representing the IT industry Programs include public policy and business development ETC Committee of ITAA focused on electronic voting Comprised of electronic voting vendors

    3. Florida 2000 Bush wins by 536 votes  Election decided by the Supreme Court 36 days following the vote  Court relies on “Equal Protection” Clause to render its verdict

    4. A multi-state problem with voting infrastructure Documented by several studies CalTech/MIT Study Carter Commission (National Commission on Federal Election Reform) Problems with “residual vote” - over/under vote looms large (e.g. 6.2% of vote in Cook/Chicago was a “residual vote”)

    5. Who got hurt the most? minorities disenfranchised millions of lost votes disability community finds access difficult and confidentiality impossible

    6. Help America Vote Act of 2002 passes on Oct 9, 2002 Bi-Partisan bill (Reps. Bob Ney, Steny Hoyer, Senators Dodd and McConnell) Creates the EAC Authorizes and Allocates money Sets Requirements

    7. Four member commission  Not appointed until January 2004 Standards Board – 110 (all states represented) Board of Advisors – 37 Technical Guidelines Development Committee – 15 (Headed by NIST)

    8. Voting Systems Verify Vote Second Chance voting Notify voter if an over-vote Audit trail Accessible for all voters – one per poll site Deadline: January 1, 2006 Alternative language capability Each State must define what a vote is by voting system

    9. Voter Registration “Near real time” voter data base of all voters statewide Not a county system linked, but a statewide system available to counties Share data with DMV and SS Administration Other Provisions Voter ID Provisional Voting

    10. $3.86 billion (plus 5% match) $325 MM early out for states – for election administration $325 MM for punch card and lever machines ($4k/Precinct) $3 billion for requirements Balance for poll worker program, disability site access, and R&D

    11. Language requirements “Lesser of 5% of registered voters or 10,000 voters who are not sufficiently proficient in English to cast a ballot” DOJ enforcement Consequences Orange County – five languages Los Angeles – nine languages Arizona, New Mexico, North Dakota: Indian languages

    12. HAVA was a watershed event in elections for three reasons: Federal funding for federal requirements Huge piece of Civil Rights legislation protecting the rights of voters with disabilities State became a player in elections for the first time Became a political issue/opportunity Became a new bureaucracy to navigate

    13. DRE development accelerated Proliferation of vendors (Unisys, Microsoft, Compaq, HP, Dell, etc) Exodus of vendors (Unisys, Microsoft, Compaq, HP, Dell, etc.)

    14. Houston Florida Georgia Maryland And that’s when the trouble began…

    15. Training programs insufficient to meet the demands of change Equipment failures/reliability issues Software version controls Voter education programs need additional resources/support BUT No documented case of any votes lost to fraud

    16. Rebecca Mercuri – Bryn Mawr to adjunct professor at Harvard – author of the “Mercuri Method” Beverly Harris – literary publicist – started web site Black Box Voting.org David Dill – Stanford University – started web-based campaign called Verified Voting.Org Avi Rubin/Dan Wallach – John Hopkins/Rice – authors of critical reports on Diebold AccuVote Ben Cohen – True Majority – The Computer Ate My Vote New York Times, and a few other major media outlets.

    17. Electronic voting is insecure and not transparent Electronic voting system vendors and elections officials cannot be trusted   Only a voter verified paper audit trail can be trusted

    18. Many incorrect assumptions on technology Used limited quantity of older code Ignored checks and balances in elections equipment and procedures that would prevent fraud scenarios Did not do a reality check with elections experts Some study authors later disavowed unrealistic scenarios But the perception was already created in the media…damage done.

    19. Disability rights groups League of Women Voters  LCCR Michael Shamos - Carnegie Mellon Henry Brady - Cal Berkeley Ted Selker – MIT Brit Williams – Georgia State Dan Tokaji, Ohio State THE VAST MAJORITY OF ELECTION PROFESSIONALS

    20. There are many safeguards in place – election security isn’t just a function of software design Undetected fraud is practically impossible and requires a vast conspiracy The alternatives to electronic voting are worse than the problems – including the VVPAT VVPAT…putting the cart before the horse. Let’s look at the science Assess risks, test hypotheses, and test again Let EAC/NIST work.

    21. Appointed almost a year late Seriously underfunded to do its work Delinquent action left a void while controversy raged

    22. Maryland security review SAIC, RABA reports State of Ohio CompuWare and InfoSentry reports Illinois passed a law requiring VVPAT California held hearings and banned all electronic voting Re-certification if security steps taken

    23. Rush Holt/Hillary Clinton – VVPAT bill  HAVA sponsors on VVPAT in a letter to colleagues: “Not only are such VVPAT proposals premature, but they would undermine the essential HAVA provisions, such as the disability and language minority access requirements, and could result in more, rather than less, voter disenfranchisement and error.”

    24. We’ve seen this before with Punch Cards There is no problem (no incidence of fraud found) We’re a market driven industry and we’ll make what you want Move to action: All current vendors are in the process of developing or certifying a VVPAT solution Others offer electronic verification Encrypted receipts that voter can go on web and see if vote was included in count as cast.

    25. DREs are part of a process that includes voter registration, equipment procurement, election preparation, election day poll site administration, and election results and canvassing Security hinges on all components working properly Not vulnerable from a single point of attack Misplaced focus on software Voter anonymity requirements make security with transparency extremely tough to attain.

    26. What is the role of the Election Industry in the conduct of elections in this country? Hardware – voter interface design; reliability; Software – functionality; security; Election management systems – election logistics Project implementations Election professional training Poll worker training Voter outreach Ongoing support

    27. Equipment features/functionality: Smart cards control access Software-based and physical protection of machines, memory cards No transmission over Internet/public networks Audit logs & device history records Multiple memory card storage Encrypted stored data Print capability

    28. What does the current process look like, from the vendor point of view? Regulatory process NASED (now EAC/ NIST) Voting System Standards 1990, 2002 Next generation –April 2005? Evolution of Standards: from a photo mechanical hardware intensive process to a software based industry Focus changing from functionality to security

    29. ITA process Line by line examination of the code Over 400 pages of rules to certify against  State certification follows ITA process Federal Standards up to now have been voluntary 35 of 50 states use them State testing can be more rigorous than federal testing Most of the equipment being replaced was not subject to third party testing, or was not tested to the same rigorous standards as DREs and other newer equipment.

    30. Pre-Election Testing: Logic and Accuracy Testing Vote a predefined script and then tally for predefined result Clocks set to the day of election to test for problems that could only happen on the day of election. MD example…paper ballot recount produced errors.

    31. Election Day Testing Real time audit logs Records from which the operation of a voting system may be audited Testing 48 hours before and immediately after an election Parallel Testing

    32. Are Administrative Processes Adequate? Chain of custody – documented – conspiracy required to circumvent Physical security – ballot box seals, for example Most people who criticize electronic voting systems combine administrative procedures with hacking or malicious/defective software code Lots of administrative issues but NO issues of election fraud

    33. Are People Processes Adequate? Training is the most important factor in conducting an election Poll workers are a core issue – profile is not optimum (72 Years average age)!

    34. How Safe are Alternative Methods? Lever Machines Punch Cards Optical Scan ALL are programmed for EVERY election DRE systems are NEVER programmed for any election!

    35. Hacking, Fraud are possible on a wide scale DREs do not offer a recount procedure Audit Trails/Paper Trails Logical conclusions: Migrate to Open Source, Turn DREs into Ballot Markers, and Hand Count ALL ballots Paper Ballots and Audit Trails have their own sets of problems Accessibility Mechanical Failures How do you know they are being counted accurately????

    36.

    37. Source code is already held in third party escrow EAC calling for software escrowed in National Software Reference Library Verification that what is running on election day is what is certified ETC has endorsed this proposal All major vendors have submitted machine language.

    38. InfoSentry Poll – by Opinion Research Corp. – Feb. 2004 68% of respondents trusted confidentiality and accuracy of DREs 31% expressed moderate/low levels of trust in equipment. Winston Group – commissioned by ITAA – April 2004 Overwhelming majority (88%) indicate confidence that DRE equipment in their precinct accurately records their vote…same as confidence levels of those using paper ballot. Miami Herald – November 2004 25% of Florida poll respondents were not confident that vote would be accurately counted by touchscreens.

    39. Recent poll by the Poneman Institute 88% of computer security professionals have “no confidence” in the “security and reliability” of electronic voting systems Same poll…only 25 % of voters expressed concern Concern mostly about voter reaction to the devices, and not the security of the machines.

    40. On top of all the technical issues around electronic voting sits a deep distrust of the political system Kerry – 2,500 lawyers appointed. Working in every state, enough for 5 simultaneous statewide recounts  Bush – 30,000 precincts with legal coverage

    41. Several citizens’ groups have filed lawsuits in CA, FL, NJ, MD seeking injunctions, VVPAT mandates. Suits rejected: NJ opinion -- plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate any "immediate threat" posed by "the type of voting machines that have been used in this state, and in other states, for many years without problems."

    42. This issue isn’t going away because elections are close and will likely stay close Close elections are not unique to the 2000 Presidential election Since 1948, over half of all states have had their electoral votes decided at least once by less than 1% of the vote 2000 – 5 states had less than 1% difference in popular vote

    43. Election technology vendors are critical stakeholders in the election process. The Election technology industry has a strong incentive to support and assist a process that will result in accurate, accessible, reliable and trustworthy elections.

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