Hacking Democracy

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Hacking Democracy
Directed by Simon Ardizzone
Russell Michaels
Produced by Simon Ardizzone
Russell Michaels
Robert Carrillo Cohen
Starring Bev Harris
Release date(s) November 2, 2006
Running time 90 minutes
Language English
IMDb profile

Hacking Democracy is a 2006 documentary film by Simon Ardizzone and Russell Michaels, produced by Simon Ardizzone, Robert Carrillo Cohen and Russell Michaels, shown on HBO. It documents anomalies and irregularities with 'e-voting' (electronic voting) systems that occurred during the 2004 election, especially in Volusia County, Florida, and investigates the integrity of electronic voting machines.

Contents

[edit] Demonstrated flaws

The documentary follows Bev Harris and Andy Stephenson, activists for Black Box Voting, as they attempt to discover whether Diebold voting machines could be tampered with and if their use in the previous election had produced any irregularities. During the course of the documentary, multiple methods of tampering with the votes are shown.

The first is through editing the database file that contains the voting totals. This file is a standard Microsoft Access database, and can be opened by normal means outside of the encompassing voting program. This file is later shown in a password-protected state, disallowing the easy opening of the file shown earlier in the documentary. This protection, however, was bypassed through a program that searched for a string of text and edited the file through external means. It was not tested whether this method would create discrepencies with the tabulation software when checked against the voting machine.[1]

The second is through the program that tabulates the votes, named GEMS, coded by Diebold. The documentary revealed that through the use of the tabulation software, you would be able to reassign votes to different candidates. This hack was demonstrated to be easily detected, as the voting machines themselves would have inconsistent records with the tabulation software.

The last is through hacking the information on the Accu-Vote card to keep bad records. This method was discovered by Harri Hursti. The final method was tested by the Florida Supervisor of Elections, Ion Sancho, on the actual voting equipment used by Tallahassee, Florida in their prior elections. This method demonstrated, contrary to a previous Diebold statement, that a person attempting to rig the votes of a precinct would need access to only the card, not the voting machine or tabulation software. This method, when cross-checked between the voting machines and tabulation software, appears legitimate, and further produces a proper zero-vote print out to verify the card is correct before voting begins.[2]

[edit] Reaction

Even though no one from Diebold Election Systems had seen the film,[1] Diebold President David Byrd suggested that Hacking Democracy was "replete with material examples of inaccurate reporting", and demanded that it not be aired.[2][3] His criticism was based on an earlier film made by the same directors.

One of Diebold's objections to the film was that it failed to mention that Avi Rubin, a Johns Hopkins computer science professor and vocal Diebold critic, may have a conflict of interest. Rubin at one point owned stock options in VoteHere, which sells auditing software and systems for voting machines. However, Rubin disposed of his stock options and withdrew from the VoteHere advisory board in August of 2003, and says he has not had any meaningful contact since joining over 2 years ago, except occasionally receiving press clippings.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "HBO defends "Hacking" from criticism", Monsters & Critics.
  2. ^ Janofsky, Michael. "Diebold demands that HBO cancel documentary on voting machines", Bloomberg News, 2006-10-31. Retrieved on 2006-11-03.
  3. ^ Lerer, Lisa. "Diebold Gives HBO A Thumbs Down", Forbes, 2006-11-01.

[edit] See also

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[edit] Reviews

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