Difference between revisions of "Voting"

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==Related Pages==
 
==Related Pages==
* [[Voting systems]]
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* [[voting systems]]
* [[Virtual voting districts]]
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* [[virtual voting districts]]
* [[Voting in the United States]]
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* [[voting in the United States]]
* [[Voting system software]]
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* [[voting system software]] should be moved to [[voting software]] and [[open-source voting software]]
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* [[voting hardware]]
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** [[Diebold]]
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** [[Election Systems & Software]]
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** [[Hart InterCivic]]
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==Links==
 
==Links==
 
===Reference===
 
===Reference===
 
* {{wikipedia|Voting}}
 
* {{wikipedia|Voting}}
===News===
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===to file===
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* '''2014-02-24''' [http://pos.org/2014/02/off-the-grid-national-survey/ Off the Grid National Survey] Slide 5 (Key Point #3) says "For the first time in our polling, less than half of voters now say live TV is their primary way to watch video content"; details on slide 13.
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** [https://plus.google.com/114401727024677849167/posts/GrYm4pMei6V post] summarizes: "almost 1/3 of likely voters haven't watched live TV in the past week. As voters move 'Off the Grid' and watch less live TV, they are consuming more online video content, with numbers increasing by 61% from 2012."
 
* '''2007-02-21''' [http://news.com.com/Estonia+to+hold+first+national+Internet+election/2100-1028_3-6161005.html Estonia to hold first national Internet election]
 
* '''2007-02-21''' [http://news.com.com/Estonia+to+hold+first+national+Internet+election/2100-1028_3-6161005.html Estonia to hold first national Internet election]
 
===Video===
 
===Video===
* '''2007-06-09''' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EowKalRT3lc changing the ROMs of a Nedap e-voting computer in 60 seconds]: the ROMs control how the machine works; a thorough visual examination of the system wouldn't necessarily be able to detect the swap. The only guaranteed method that comes to mind would be a byte-by-byte comparison of the "real" ROM's contents with whatever is found in the machine, although there may be some way to do it using cryptography as long as the "real" ROM contents are kept secret.
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* '''2007-06-09''' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EowKalRT3lc changing the ROMs of a Nedap e-voting computer in 60 seconds]: the ROMs control how the machine works; a thorough visual examination of the system wouldn't necessarily be able to detect the swap. Voting machines can be designed to prevent this, however, by including a nonvolatile memory area containing an encrypted hash of the authorized ROM contents. At boot time, before loading the ROMs, the machine would compare the hash of the actual ROMs with the stored hash; if they did not match, it would refuse to boot and would display an error message alerting operators to the problem. '''Any machine which does ''not'' have a solution like this built into it, though, is therefore vulnerable to this kind of swap.'''
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* '''2006-10-11''' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B05wPomCjEY voting computer tempest attack]: The Nedap ES3B voting computer leaks a signal, receivable at up to 25m, which can be decoded to detect what votes are being cast. 90% of all Dutch votes are cast using that computer, according to the video.

Latest revision as of 21:58, 25 February 2014

Overview

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Related Pages

Links

Reference

to file

  • 2014-02-24 Off the Grid National Survey Slide 5 (Key Point #3) says "For the first time in our polling, less than half of voters now say live TV is their primary way to watch video content"; details on slide 13.
    • post summarizes: "almost 1/3 of likely voters haven't watched live TV in the past week. As voters move 'Off the Grid' and watch less live TV, they are consuming more online video content, with numbers increasing by 61% from 2012."
  • 2007-02-21 Estonia to hold first national Internet election

Video

  • 2007-06-09 changing the ROMs of a Nedap e-voting computer in 60 seconds: the ROMs control how the machine works; a thorough visual examination of the system wouldn't necessarily be able to detect the swap. Voting machines can be designed to prevent this, however, by including a nonvolatile memory area containing an encrypted hash of the authorized ROM contents. At boot time, before loading the ROMs, the machine would compare the hash of the actual ROMs with the stored hash; if they did not match, it would refuse to boot and would display an error message alerting operators to the problem. Any machine which does not have a solution like this built into it, though, is therefore vulnerable to this kind of swap.
  • 2006-10-11 voting computer tempest attack: The Nedap ES3B voting computer leaks a signal, receivable at up to 25m, which can be decoded to detect what votes are being cast. 90% of all Dutch votes are cast using that computer, according to the video.