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News :: Media
ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website Current rating: 0
18 Oct 2003
Modified: 30 Oct 2003
EFF Defends Right to Publish Links to Electronic Voting Memos

[Updated with Tom Tomorrow cartoon.]

San Francisco - Defending the right to link to controversial
information about flaws in electronic voting systems, EFF
announced today it will defend an Internet Service Provider
(ISP) and a news website publisher against claims of
indirect copyright infringement from the electronic voting
machines' manufacturer.

On October 10, 2003, electronic voting company Diebold,
Inc., sent a cease-and-desist letter to the nonprofit Online
Policy Group (OPG) ISP demanding that OPG remove a page of
links published on an Independent Media Center (IndyMedia)
website located on a computer server hosted by OPG.
TMW10-29-03.jpg
Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Release

For Immediate Release: Thursday, October 16, 2003


Contact:

Wendy Seltzer
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
wendy (at) eff.org
+1 415 436-9333 x125 (office), +1 914 374-0613 (cell)

Will Doherty
Executive Director
Online Policy Group
press (at) onlinepolicy.org
+1 415 826-3532 (please leave message)


ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website

EFF Defends Right to Publish Links to Electronic Voting Memos

San Francisco - Defending the right to link to controversial
information about flaws in electronic voting systems, EFF
announced today it will defend an Internet Service Provider
(ISP) and a news website publisher against claims of
indirect copyright infringement from the electronic voting
machines' manufacturer.

On October 10, 2003, electronic voting company Diebold,
Inc., sent a cease-and-desist letter to the nonprofit Online
Policy Group (OPG) ISP demanding that OPG remove a page of
links published on an Independent Media Center (IndyMedia)
website located on a computer server hosted by OPG.

Diebold sent out dozens of similar notices to ISPs hosting
IndyMedia and other websites linking to or publishing copies
of Diebold internal memos. OPG is the only ISP so far to
resist the takedown demand from Diebold.

"What topic could be more important to our democracy than
discussions about the mechanics and legitimacy of electronic
voting systems now being introduced nationwide?" said EFF
Staff Attorney Wendy Seltzer. "EFF won't stand by as
corporations like Diebold chill important online debate by
churning out legal notices to ISPs that usually just take
down legitimate content rather than face the legal risk."

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) passed by
Congress in 1998 provides a "safe harbor" as an incentive
for ISPs to take down user-posted content when they receive
cease-and-desist letters such as the ones sent by Diebold.
By removing the content, or forcing the user to do so, for a
minimum of 10 days, an ISP can take itself out of the middle
of any copyright claim. As a result, few ISPs have tested
whether they would face any liability for such user activity
in the first place. EFF has been exposing some of the ways
the safe harbor limits online speech through the Chilling
Effects Clearinghouse.

"We defend strongly the free speech right of our client
IndyMedia to publish links to Diebold memos relevant to the
public debate about electronic voting machine security,"
explained OPG Executive Director Will Doherty. "Diebold's
claim of copyright infringement from linking to information
posted elsewhere on the Web is ridiculous, and even more
silly is the claim that we as an ISP could be liable for our
client's web links."

For this release:
http://www.eff.org/Legal/ISP_liability/20031016_eff_pr.php

Cease-and-desist letter Diebold sent to OPG:
http://www.eff.org/Legal/ISP_liability/cease_desist_letter.php

IndyMedia Web page subject to Diebold cease-and-desist
letter:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2003/09/1649419_comment.php

Security researchers discover huge flaws in e-voting system:
http://www.eff.org/Activism/E-voting/20030723_eff_pr.php

Link to Chilling Effects on DMCA safe harbor provisions:
http://www.chillingeffects.org/dmca512/


About EFF:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil
liberties organization working to protect rights in the
digital world. Founded in 1990, EFF actively encourages and
challenges industry and government to support free
expression and privacy online. EFF is a member-supported
organization and maintains one of the most linked-to
websites in the world at
http://www.eff.org/

About Online Policy Group:

The Online Policy Group (OPG) is a nonprofit organization
dedicated to online policy research, outreach, and action on
issues such as access, privacy, the digital divide, and
digital defamation. The organization fulfills its motto of
"One Internet With Equal Access for All" through programs
such as donation-based email, email list hosting, website
hosting, domain registrations, colocation services,
technical consulting, educational training, and refurbished
computer donations. The California Community Colocation
Project (CCCP) and QueerNet are OPG projects. OPG focuses on
Internet participants' civil liberties and human rights,
like access, privacy, safety, and serving schools,
libraries, disabled, elderly, youth, women, and sexual,
gender, and ethnic minorities. Find out more at
http://www.onlinepolicy.org/

About IndyMedia:

Indymedia is an international network working to build a
decentralized, non-commercial media infrastructure to
counter an increasingly consolidated corporate media.
Indymedia collectives have spread rapidly since the WTO
protests in Seattle 1999, with IMC groups now working
throughout North & South America, the Middle East, Europe,
Africa, Asia and Oceania, accessible through
http://www.indymedia.org/
Related stories on this site:
Link To The Full Stash Of Diebold Memos...
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Diebold Targeted By Electronic Civil Disobedience
Current rating: 0
22 Oct 2003
Defending the right of a fair, democratic election, Why War? and the Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons (SCDC) announced today that they are rejecting Diebold Elections Systems' cease and desist orders and are initiating an electronic civil disobedience campaign that will ensure permanent public access to the controversial leaked memos.

Earlier this week, the Electronic Frontier Foundation announced that it will defend the right of Online Privacy Group, the Internet service provider for San Francisco Indymedia, to host links to the controversial memos. Going one step further, Why War? and SCDC members are the first to publicly refuse to comply with Diebold's cease and desist order by continually providing access to the documents.

More to this story can be found at:

http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/WO0310/S00237.htm

and the Swarthmore students' page:

http://why-war.com/

why-war.com/
Current Links To The Full Stash Of Memos
Current rating: 0
22 Oct 2003
http://d176.whartonab.swarthmore.edu/
http://d176.whartonab.swarthmore.edu/diebold_internalmemos.pdf
http://noisebox.cypherpunks.to/~visible/vote/vote.html'
http://www.scifience.net/
http://emdx.org/r.php?U=BBV
http://opium.mine.nu/bbv/
http://centipede.provocation.net/diebold/
http://localh.kicks-ass.org/bbv/
http://d125.wortha.swarthmore.edu/

Indymedia Fights Diebold's Legal Attempt To Silence Discussions About E-voting
Current rating: 0
23 Oct 2003
Indymedia will defend its right to post internal memos and documents detailing vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines manufactured by the Diebold Corporation. The documents were made publicly available, and subsequently reported by writer Bev Harris on her websites blackboxvoting.com and blackboxvoting.org.

The vast information contained in these documents is still being investigated by top computer scientists and researchers, but a set of widely circulated internal memos detail Diebold's flippant disregard of test runs, accuracy audits, and security for its voting machines. System tests (much like a dress rehearsal) are often required by local election laws--Diebold memos mention how they simply changed the name "memory test" to "***System Test Passed***" as if the machine performed a self audit. The memos also say how Diebold installed new versions of the voting software that were left untested.

Their election results are not secure, as evidenced by this comment in one email regarding the "contents" (i.e. the votes) of the e-voting machines: "Now, where the perception comes in is that its right now very *easy* to change the contents. Double click the .mdb file." Diebold's Republican executives have touted e-voting as a solution to the punchcard voting systems that scandalized Florida in 2000. In fact, this evidence of security and reliability flaws raises serious questions about this "solution" to election woes in the US.

Diebold responded to these disturbing claims by using an intellectual property law--the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) --to force websites to remove the memos and emails, effectively muzzling investigative journalists such as Bev Harris.

Diebold has been sending cease and desist letters to internet service providers (ISPs) that host the documents or links to them. If they want the protection of the DMCA's "safe harbor", the DMCA requires ISPs to take down the material for at least 10 days, even if the material is protected as copyright ."

Numerous Indymedia servers have been targeted by Diebold in its campaign to suppress this critical information. The Online Policy Group (OPG), a nonprofit ISP which provides San Francisco Indymedia and other nonprofit groups with free Internet services, received a cease-and-desist letter from Diebold on October 10th asking them to remove links to the memos about the Diebold machines. After consulting the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), OPG refused.

The ISP for IMC Italy, Rackspace.com, also received a cease and desist notice on October 10th for publishing some of the same internal memos. The Italy IMC server sits in the UK and because Rackspace is a US-based company, Rackspace complied with Diebold's request to get the links removed. Other websites received similar letters and quickly caved to the cease and desist letters; Jim March's ISP did not.

Diebold claims that parts of the memos were fabricated, but asserts that either way this is "Diebold Property . . .being publicly displayed . . . without Diebold's consent." Indymedia believes, either way, journalists and the public have a right to evaluate the legitimacy of these memos and their import on the security of our democratic process.

The EFF, the OPG and Indymedia believe that information about serious security flaws that could permit election officials (among others) to manipulate the vote or defraud the public is critical to the debate surrounding e-voting, and that posting these materials on the internet for the public is fair use.

On the 21th of October the website Why?War made public that they "are rejecting Diebold Elections Systems' cease and desist orders" and initiated an "electronic civil disobedience campaign to ensure permanent public access to the controversial leaked memos." Currently the memos can also be seen and dowloaded from their website and several mirrors.

The complete public Diebold memos--all 15,000 of them--can be found hosted here:

add your own comments

See also:
http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=356465&group=webcast
Diebold BS Gets Deeper: Electronic Fraud Threw 2000 Election To Bush In Florida
Current rating: 0
24 Oct 2003
The Diebold Memos' Smoking Gun Volusia County Memos Disclose Election 2000 Vote Fraud

"DELAND, Fla., Nov. 11 - Something very strange happened on election night to Deborah Tannenbaum, a Democratic Party official in Volusia County. At 10 p.m., she called the county elections department and learned that Al Gore was leading George W. Bush 83,000 votes to 62,000. But when she checked the county's Web site for an update half an hour later, she found a startling development: Gore's count had dropped by 16,000 votes, while an obscure Socialist candidate had picked up 10,000--all because of a single precinct with only 600 voters."

- Washington Post Sunday , November 12, 2000 ; Page A22

Yes. Something very strange happened in Volusia County on election night November 2000, the night that first Gore won Florida, then Bush, and then as everybody can so well remember there was a tie.

Something strange indeed. But what exactly? In the above report ( click for full version), written days after the election, hotshot Washington Post reporter Dana Milbank goes on to attribute the strange 16,022 negative vote tally from Volusia's precinct 216 to an apparently innocent cause.

"…. faulty 'memory cards' in the machines caused the 16,000-vote disappearance on election night. The glitch was soon fixed," he wrote.

But thanks to recent investigations into Black Box Voting by Washington State writer Bev Harris we now know this explanation is not correct. In fact it is not even in the ballpark.

According to recently discovered internal Diebold Election Systems memos, Global Election Systems' (which was later purchased by Diebold) own technical staff were also stumped by the events in Volusia County/

In Chapter 11 of her new book "Black Box Voting In the 21st Century" released early today in .PDF format at Blackboxvoting.com and here at Scoop Ms Harris observes.

"If you strip away the partisan rancor over the 2000 election, you are left with the undeniable fact that a presidential candidate conceded the election to his opponent based on [results from] a second card that mysteriously appears, subtracts 16,022 votes, then just as mysteriously disappears."

Read the rest of the story here:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0310/S00211.htm
Campaign Update
Current rating: 0
30 Oct 2003

Day Nine, Oct. 29: The following is a statement by Why War? member Micah White, a senior in philosophy and a minor in interpretation theory at Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pa.:

Diebold can’t win! Each cease and desist order is simply met with more mirrors. We are willing and able to continue this campaign until the 2004 presidential elections. We will not allow Diebold’s faulty voting machines to replace democracy.
Why War? has now received a second cease and desist letter (first letter, second letter). Diebold’s use of the DMCA is absurd and their actions are irrelevant. Nearly 100,000 people have now read this website. We estimate that at least 30,000 people have downloaded the entire collection of 13,000 memos directly from just three of the mirrors above. The memos are on peer-to-peer file trading systems. They are in Freenet.
Diebold is, by its corporate nature, providing proof for the suspicions of millions of people world wide who are now beginning to hear about this controversy. Diebold, we will not stop until there is an open examination of your misdeeds. (Will they put that line in their next cease-desist?)
What will Diebold do when they cannot stop the movement from posting their memos? How will they retailiate?
The response thus far has been amazing. If Why War? doesn’t respond immediately to your e-mail we apologize, but we do need your mirrors. Directions are available.

Day Eight, Oct. 28: Amherst and MIT have received cease-desist letters (copy of MIT cease-desist letter). New mirrors are now up at UNC, Duke, Berkeley, NCSU and U Penn.

Diebold has publicly admitted that leaked memos do not meet DMCA standards for copyright infringement. In the Associated Press article, a Diebold representative declares:

... the fact that the company sent the cease-and-desist letters does not mean the documents are authentic — or give credence to advocates who claim lax Diebold security could allow hackers to rig machines.

"We're cautioning anyone from drawing wrong or incomplete conclusions about any of those documents or files purporting to be authentic," Jacobsen said.

Ernest Miller explains that the DMCA requires that documents be authentic; if the documents aren’t authentic, it isn’t copyright infringement. Our position is that even if the memos are authentic (which we believe they are, or Diebold would be pursuing a libel campaign), they are not copyright infringment as they are covered under DMCA fair use guidelines.

Since some of you have been asking, yes, Swarthmore College is still enforcing its policy of cutting off network access to students who link to information about the memos (or the memos themselves). There have been many discussions of this absurd policy — see, for instance, LawMeme’s analysis — and we appreciate the letters that are being sent to Dean Gross and The Phoenix (e.g. Seth Finkelstein’s). We hope that by expanding to other colleges and universities we can broaden the campaign while minimizing the impact of our own institution’s refusal to take a stand. (If other educational institutions encounter such policies, this script may be of help.)

Day Seven, Oct. 27: The movement is winning. The story is spreading (Associated Press). Diebold’s actions are being thrust into the light. How long can they pursue the sepression of evidence that links them directly to election fraud? Every lawsuit is simply another admission of guilt. Thus, we are pleased to announce that students at Indiana University, Harvard, and Berkeley have now joined this campaign against Diebold.

Today Andrea Foster authored an excellent article about this battle in the Chronicle for Higher Education. She writes:

[A spokesperson] said Diebold will continue to send copyright-infringement notices to Internet service providers that host the company documents, including the four other institutions — the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Purdue University, the University of Southern California, and the University of Texas–Pan American. The materials were first obtained by Bev Harris, who is writing a book about modern-day ballot-tampering. According to published accounts, she found the materials on an unprotected Web site while doing a Google search.

Why War? asks that the movement call their bluff. Together, we can create a permanent, public, and easily accessible location for these memos. Those unable to mirror should use their talents in other ways. We need people to be deep-reading these memos and sharing exerpts. Others need to be calling their election officials and demanding that they address your concerns (one request could be this bill). And, of course, others need to be sharing with us all how to short sell Diebold’s stock so that when its price decreases the movement will prosper. Investors, now is your chance to join the struggle.

Day Six, Oct. 26: Three additional schools have been added to the list. There are now eleven .edu mirrors.

Day Five, Oct. 25: Students from four more universities, along with a second mirror at MIT, have joined the campaign.

Day Four, Oct. 24: Students from four American universities have joined the civil disobedience: MIT, USC, Purdue and the University of Texas–Pan American. Check out Black Box Voting for a startling expose on Diebold’s connection to the debacle in Florida. This is from the individual who broke the whole story about Diebold.

A visitor wrote an e-mail of support and noted:

While doing some research about electronic voting and the Diebold machines in particular, I came across this story alleging widespread vote skimming by Diebold systems in the recent California Recall election.
I think these allegations merit wider distribution and further investigation. It is important to note that these allegations include Diebold optical scan results, allowing for the possibility of a manual recount to substantiate or refute the claims made.

More information is available here.

Re: ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website
Current rating: 0
30 Oct 2003

October 22, 2003

 

Sender Information:
Online Policy Group
Sent by: Wendy Seltzer
Electronic Frontier Foundation
San Francisco, CA, 94110, USA

Recipient Information:
[Private]
Diebold, Incorporated
Walker & Jocke
Medina, OH, 44256, USA


Sent via: email and U.S. mail
Re: Diebold’s Copyright Infringement Claim

Dear [Private]:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation represents the Online Policy Group (OPG), a non-profit Internet service provider. Please provide all future correspondence on this issue to us. After review of your letter of October 10, 2003, to William Doherty, OPG respectfully declines to remove the IndyMedia pages you reference therein.

First, OPG is merely providing co-location to IndyMedia, which in turn is only providing hyperlinks to materials you claim infringe Diebold copyrights. In other words, OPG does not host the Diebold materials and neither does IndyMedia. There is merely an address for the information on the IndyMedia website as source material for a news story. Linking is not among the exclusive rights granted by the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. §106, and so cannot infringe any copyright Diebold might hold. Your allegations amount to a claim of tertiary liability; copyright law does not reach parties so far removed from a claimed infringement.

Second, the postings themselves are plainly fair use, not infringement. As the Copyright Act provides, "the fair use of a copyrighted work ... for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, ... or research, is not an infringement of copyright." 17 U.S.C. § 107. IndyMedia is a news organization whose use of these links gives background to its discussion of the controversy surrounding e-voting. We understand that the linked-to material contains internal memoranda concerning Diebold’s electronic voting machines, including admissions by Diebold staff of errors, difficulties, bugs and other problems with the machines and software. We further understand that IndyMedia linked to these memoranda as part of news reportage about the risks of election fraud or erroneous election results that might arise from use of Diebold’s voting machines.

The First Amendment plainly protects speech about this very essence of our democracy -- the right to a free and fair election. Thus, even if Diebold has an enforceable copyright in the documents, their reposting by others serves the public interest and would be deemed fair and non-infringing on all four factors of the fair use analysis: 1) The purpose and character of the use is to inform public discussion and political debate on a matter core to American democracy, the functioning of our electoral system. As a news agency, IndyMedia should be able to link to its primary sources. 2) The nature of the work is (presumably) factual and thus less protected. 3) The documents do not appear to embody any substantial expressive work. 4) Most importantly, the posting does not compete with Diebold in any current or potential market – if it cuts into sales of e-voting equipment, it does so only because Diebold’s own statements have raised concerns about the machines’ security.

Finally, it appears you are harassing numerous ISPs with these frivolous demand letters, misusing claimed copyright to interfere with numerous subscribers’ contracts for Internet service. You may wish to consider the risk of countersuit at which this puts you and your client.

Please contact me directly if you wish to discuss the matter further.

Sincerely,

/s/
Wendy Seltzer

image

 

Topic maintained by Chilling Effects

Re: ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website
Current rating: 0
02 Nov 2003
Modified: 10:47:55 AM
Can anyone tell me how Champaign County voters will be affected by electronic voting, if at all. From what I've been reading the 2004 election might make the 2000 election look like a well-run machine. What steps has the Champaign County Board taken, if any are necessary, to ensure that all votes are counted accurately?
File Sharing Pits Copyright Against Free Speech
Current rating: 0
03 Nov 2003
Forbidden files are circulating on the Internet and threats of lawsuits are in the air. Music trading? No, it is the growing controversy over one company’s electronic voting systems, and the issues being raised, some legal scholars say, are as fundamental as the sanctity of elections and the right to free speech.

Diebold Election Systems, which makes voting machines, is waging legal war against grass-roots advocates, including dozens of college students, who are posting on the Internet copies of the company’s internal communications about its electronic voting machines.

The students say that, by trying to spread the word about problems with the company’s software, they are performing a valuable form of electronic civil disobedience, one that has broad implications for American society. They also contend that they are protected by fair use exceptions in copyright law.

Diebold, however, says it is a case of copyright infringement, and has sent cease-and-desist orders to the students and, in many cases, their colleges, demanding that the 15,000 e-mail messages and memorandums be removed from each Web site. “We reserve the right to protect that which we feel is proprietary,” a spokesman for Diebold, David Bear, said.

The files circulating online include thousands of e-mail messages and memorandums dating to March 2003 from January 1999 that include discussions of bugs in Diebold’s software and warnings that its computer network are poorly protected against hackers. Diebold has sold more than 33,000 machines, many of which have been used in elections.

Advocates and journalists have mined the trove of corporate messages to find statements that appear to suggest many continuing security problems with the software that runs the system, and last-minute software changes that, by law, are generally not allowed after election authorities have certified the software for an election.

Some colleges, like Swarthmore, have bowed to the pressure and removed the documents from their networks. But in doing so last month, the dean, Robert Gross, maintained that Swarthmore supported the students in spirit. “We believe their actions express the values of the college, including its commitment to prepare students to be engaged, socially responsible citizens,” he said in a statement. Swarthmore has encouraged the students to keep up the debate and is providing legal advice about how to respond to the Diebold letters, a Swarthmore spokesman, Tom Krattenmaker, said.

Last week the advocates’ efforts to keep the documents online took another step as Freenet, an international anticensorship organization that promotes the anonymous distribution of files, obtained copies of the Diebold documents. The technology that the network uses is a peer-to-peer service, and is similar in many ways to the software behind file-trading companies like Kazaa and the original Napster.

Legal scholars say that the online protest and the use of copyright law by Diebold have broad implications and show that the copyright wars are about more than whether Britney Spears gets royalties from downloaded songs.

“We’re so focused on the microview — whether EMI is going to make a buck next year — but there is so much more at stake in our battle to control the flows of information,” including issues at the core of free speech and democracy itself, said Siva Vaidhyanathan, a professor in the department of culture and communication at New York University.

Nelson Pavlosky, a sophomore at Swarthmore from Morristown, N.J., who put documents online through the campus organization Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons said the cease-and-desist letters were “a perfect example of how copyright law can be and is abused by corporations like Diebold” to stifle freedom of speech. He said that he and other advocates wished the college had decided to fight instead of take down the files.

“We feel like they wimped out,” Mr. Pavlosky said.

But with each takedown, the publicity grows through online discussion and media coverage, and more and more people join the fray, giving Diebold’s efforts a Sorcerer’s Apprentice feel. The advocates, meanwhile, are finding that civil disobedience carries risks. One student who posted the documents and has received a letter, Zac Elliott of Indiana University, said, “I’m starting to worry about the ramifications for my entire family if I end up in some sort of legal action.”

Copyright law, and specifically the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, are being abused by Diebold, said Wendy Seltzer, a lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group. Copyright is supposed to protect creative expression, Ms. Seltzer said, but in this case the law is being evoked “because they don’t want the facts out there.”

The foundation is advising many students informally and helping them to find legal aid, and it is representing the Online Policy Group, a nonprofit Internet service provider that got a cease-and-desist letter from Diebold after links to the documents were published on a news Web site that the group posts.

Diebold has become a favorite target of advocates who accuse it of partisanship: company executives have made large contributions to the Republican Party and the chief executive, Walden W. O’Dell, said in an invitation to a fund-raiser that he was “committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year.’’

He has since said that he will keep a lower political profile. Diebold has been trying to stop the dissemination of the files for months with cease and desist letters, but the number of sources for the documents continues to proliferate. Then in July, the first evaluation of the purloined software from recognized authorities in the field — a team involving experts and Johns Hopkins University and Rice University — found several serious holes in the software’s computer security which, if exploited, could allow someone to vote repeatedly, or to change the votes of others. A later review of the software for the State of Maryland agreed that the software flaws did exist, but that in the practice of real elections, other safety nets of security would keep the vulnerabilities in the code from being exploited. Diebold has said it has been working to fix problems.

As Diebold continued to deal with the headache resulting from its leaked code last week, hackers released software from another of the three major high-tech election companies, Sequoia Voting Systems. Reports of that leak first appeared in the online news service of Wired magazine, which suggested that the company’s software also suffered from poor security design.

A spokesman for Sequoia, Alfie Charles, said that the software that had been taken was an older version that had been substantially modified. Possible security flaws in that software, which were discussed in the Wired account do not constitute an actual threat to security, he said.

Mr. Charles also emphasized that his company’s leak was unlike that of Diebold, which had left much of the purloined data unprotected on its own site. The Sequoia software was taken from the servers of a “grossly negligent” contractor to Sequoia, and not from the company itself, he said.

That defense does not sway Prof. Rebecca Mercuri, an specialist in election technology who teaches computer science at Bryn Mawr College. The fact that the software of both companies was not protected raises questions about their security, she said.

“Are these companies staffed by folks completely ignorant of computer security,” she said, “or are they just blatantly flaunting that they can breach every possible rule of protocol and still sell voting machines everywhere with impunity?”

Mr. Bear of Diebold said the election security and the virtual walls around his company’s computer network are different; “You’re looking at apples and oranges,” he said. Of the security breach, he said, “We acknowledge that was unfortunate that that occurred.” But the “security and sanctity of the election process,” he said, has been proved by the Science Applications International Corporation report.

Mr. Bear said that Sequoia planned to submit its software to Aviel D. Rubin, a computer security researcher at Johns Hopkins and the leader of the team that analyzed the Diebold code. Mr. Rubin said he was optimistic that the relationship with Sequoia would be less adversarial.

“It’s very different from the way that Diebold has been doing things.” Mr. Rubin, who has received a cease-and-desist notice from Diebold because of his research, said, “The solution is to stop selling insecure voting machines and not to continue threatening students who are only trying to protect our democracy.”

Voting companies emphasize that their products undergo rigorous testing and independent review required by federal laws for certification.

“Judging from the majority of news coverage, one might think that companies just throw software together and start selling equipment and running elections, when the reality is just the opposite,” Mr. Charles of Sequoia said.

Some observers of the fight say it is having an effect beyond ones and zeroes and virtual forms of hanging chad. Bev Harris, who is writing a book on the electronic voting industry, was among the first people to place the Diebold files online.

She said that when she began her research, young people tended to tell her that voting was irrelevant to their lives. That is changing, she said; “What more important thing can we do so that we can get them involved, and see how important voting is?”


Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
http://www.nytimes.com

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Re: ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website
Current rating: 0
05 Nov 2003
Champaign County still uses punch-card voting, so the Diebold affair won't affect how we vote or count votes. We're still using a different highly flawed technology.

The County Clerk handles voting. The office's website is here: http://www.champaigncountyclerk.com/