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Making Votes Count
New York Times | Editorial
Sunday 13 June 2004
Gambling on Voting
If election officials want to
convince voters that electronic voting can be trusted, they
should be willing to make it at least as secure as slot
machines. To appreciate how poor the oversight on voting
systems is, it's useful to look at the way Nevada
systematically ensures that electronic gambling machines in
Las Vegas operate honestly and accurately. Electronic
voting, by comparison, is rife with lax procedures, security
risks and conflicts of interest.
On a trip last week to the Nevada
Gaming Control Board laboratory, in a state office building
off the Las Vegas Strip, we found testing and enforcement
mechanisms that go far beyond what is required for
electronic voting. Among the ways gamblers are more
protected than voters:
1. The state has access to all
gambling software. The Gaming Control Board has copies on
file of every piece of gambling device software currently
being used, and an archive going back years. It is illegal
for casinos to use software not on file. Electronic voting
machine makers, by contrast, say their software is a trade
secret, and have resisted sharing it with the states that
buy their machines.
2. The software on gambling
machines is constantly being spot-checked. Board inspectors
show up unannounced at casinos with devices that let them
compare the computer chip in a slot machine to the one on
file. If there is a discrepancy, the machine is shut down,
and investigated. This sort of spot-checking is not required
for electronic voting. A surreptitious software change on a
voting machine would be far less likely to be detected.
3. There are meticulous,
constantly updated standards for gambling machines. When we
arrived at the Gaming Control Board lab, a man was firing a
stun gun at a slot machine. The machine must work when
subjected to a 20,000-volt shock, one of an array of rules
intended to cover anything that can possibly go wrong.
Nevada adopted new standards in May 2003, but to keep pace
with fast-changing technology, it is adding new ones this
month.
Voting machine standards are out
of date and inadequate. Machines are still tested with
standards from 2002 that have gaping security holes.
Nevertheless, election officials have rushed to spend
hundreds of millions of dollars to buy them.
4. Manufacturers are intensively
scrutinized before they are licensed to sell gambling
software or hardware. A company that wants to make slot
machines must submit to a background check of six months or
more, similar to the kind done on casino operators. It must
register its employees with the Gaming Control Board, which
investigates their backgrounds and criminal records.
When it comes to voting machine
manufacturers, all a company needs to do to enter the field
is persuade an election official to buy its equipment. There
is no way for voters to know that the software on their
machines was not written by programmers with fraud
convictions, or close ties to political parties or
candidates.
5. The lab that certifies
gambling equipment has an arms-length relationship with the
manufacturers it polices, and is open to inquiries from the
public. The Nevada Gaming Control Board lab is a state
agency, whose employees are paid by the taxpayers. The fees
the lab takes in go to the state's general fund. It invites
members of the public who have questions about its work to
call or e-mail.
The federal labs that certify
voting equipment are profit-making companies. They are
chosen and paid by voting machine companies, a glaring
conflict of interest. The voters and their elected
representatives have no way of knowing how the testing is
done, or that the manufacturers are not applying undue
pressure to have flawed equipment approved. Wyle
Laboratories, one of the largest testers of voting machines,
does not answer questions about its voting machine work.
6. When there is a dispute about
a machine, a gambler has a right to an immediate
investigation. When a gambler believes a slot machine has
cheated him, the casino is required to contact the Gaming
Control Board, which has investigators on call around the
clock. Investigators can open up machines to inspect their
internal workings, and their records of recent gambling
outcomes. If voters believe a voting machine has manipulated
their votes, in most cases their only recourse is to call a
board of elections number, which may well be busy, to lodge
a complaint that may or may not be investigated.
Election officials say their
electronic voting systems are the very best. But the truth
is, gamblers are getting the best technology, and voters are
being given systems that are cheap and untrustworthy by
comparison. There are many questions yet to be resolved
about electronic voting, but one thing is clear: a vote for
president should be at least as secure as a 25-cent bet in
Las Vegas.
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