Md. Vote Machines Flawed, Consultant Says
By Tom Stuckey, Associated Press
January 30, 2004
ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Maryland's new electronic voting system has many
potential security flaws that must be corrected but is nevertheless
"worthy of voter trust," a technical consultant told legislators.
Michael Wertheimer, who worked on a report presented Thursday to
the Senate Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee,
said a team that simulated an election as a test found several ways
vote totals could be changed. He said touch-screen machines could
be disabled simply by repeatedly jamming a voter card into a terminal
or lifting it up and pulling out wires.
But Wertheimer, who works for RABA Technologies, added that "we
feel the system will accurately render the election" in March.
He listed changes that should be made before the primary election
and long-term recommendations to improve security of the machines
manufactured by Diebold Election Systems Inc. of North Canton, Ohio.
Recommendations by the RABA team included protecting the machines
with tamper tape and giving each machine a different security password.
The RABA report confirms "the accuracy and security of Maryland's
voting procedures and our voting systems as they exist today,"
Bob Urosevich, president of Diebold Election Systems, said in a
statement Thursday.
"With that said, in our continued spirit of innovation and
industry leadership, there will always be room for improvement and
refinement."
Maryland spent $55.6 million to buy Diebold machines for every
jurisdiction except the city of Baltimore, which already had a touch-screen
system.
Concerns arose last summer about whether touch-screen systems
are vulnerable to fraud following the release of a report critical
of the machines' security. The legislature hired RABA to study how
vulnerable computer voting systems are to tampering and fraud.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
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