VOTING 2004:
Submit a Link
Everyone has to learn sometime. Better late than never. Here are some "how-to's" that should prove useful, and enjoyable.

Get your Car or Truck...UNSTUCK!
With
Lions Grip
Traction Pads tm

MAIN MENU

Introduction

Exit Polls Discrepancies

Questions and Conclusions

Links
Black Box Voting.Org, Harris's Website

Interview w/ Harris

Amazon Reviews of Harris's Book

Bev Harris on Voting Machines

Illustrated History of Voting Machines

Modern Voting Machines Overview

Discussion Forum

IEEE Analysis of Electronic Voting

ElectionDataSvcs Inc

Stolen Election 2004, 38 pgs

Stolen Election 2004, brief

Electoral-Vote.com Pollsters Analyses in Micro-Detail

History of the U.S. Electoral College

VotersUnite.Org

NASED Website

NASED Members List



Webstuff
New WebSurfer?
Submit a Link


COLOR ME!
VOTING 2004
KIDS! Click here.



  

Trouble?
Get your Car or Truck...UNSTUCK!
With
Lions Grip
Traction Pads
tm

This page can no longer be offered in the old format. Please email us if you have good information for this website.

Thank you!




Get your CAR or TRUCK ... UNSTUCK !!

with


 
News

California collects $2.6 million in Diebold suit for faulty voting machines, Nov 11, 2004

Will the Election be Stolen? Sept 29, 2003

Seattle Times discusses Bev Harris's findings, Sept 25, 2003

Definitions
Australian Ballots: another name for paper ballots

Central tabulating software: ballot-counting software installed on a computer at the vote-counting headquarters, usually at county level; this vote-tabulating function can be accessed by any computer in the world, and to do so is not at all complicated

Central tabulating office: ballot-counting is done here, usually at the Registrar of Voters of any given county in the U.S.

Chad: the pieces of paper left in the holes that are supposed to get punched completely out in votomatic and other punch-card voting machines; recent discussion has delineated specific several types of chads

Ciber Labs: the Huntsville, Alabama branch of an ITA that was supposed to, but didn't, test Diebold GEMS central tabulator software, according to Bev Harris

Computer voting system: a blurry, general category that, in the public eye, includes paperless touchscreen systems, as well as any system where voting results are tabulated by computer at a centralized location, which of course includes almost the entire U.S. voting process; much clarification needs to be done between computer knowledgeable people and their less-informed counterparts across the nation, to inform ourselves more clearly on what is being sent by what segments of the Internet; the primary necessity is to create a U.S. system where a recount can occur as accurately, precisely, and efficiently as it does in European and other democracies; only when a recount is feasible can the voting process be depended upon to be fair

Data Punch: "voters punch holes in the cards (with a supplied punch device) opposite their candidate or ballot issue choice. After voting, the voter may place the ballot in a ballot box, or the ballot may be fed into a computer vote-tabulating device at the precinct."

Diebold: second largest vendor of voting machines for the 2004 Election; owner, Mr. O'Dell, said publicly that he will help to get Ohio's votes to go for Bush; the company has given nearly $200,000 to the Republican party

DRE: a ballotless system known as "Direct Recording Electronic" voting system, also called "Touch Screen"

Electronic Voting System: Ballotless voting system, also known as Direct Recording Electronic (DRE); used statewide or nearly so in Georgia (Diebold), Kentucky, Tennessee, Nevada, New Mexico, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey; used extensively in several other states (see map, above)

Exit Poll: a survey taken by asking voters who they voted for, just after they have "exited" the polling place; this gives an approximation of how the real vote is going

FEC: Federal Election Commission; in 1984 they produced Voting System Standards: A Report on the Feasibility of Developing Voluntary Standards for Voting Equipment

GEMS: Global Election Management System, the Windows-based software at the heart of the Diebold voting machines

IEEE: "The IEEE and its predecessors, the AIEE (American Institute of Electrical Engineers) and the IRE (Institute of Radio Engineers), date to 1884."

ITA: Independent Testing Authority, the categorical name for companies hired by NASED to test the computer-driven voting systems now in use in the U.S.

Lever Machines: Ballotless voting system operated by pulling a lever to add one's vote to a tally; a series of levers and resulting tallies operate like odometers, moving up 1/10th of a rotation with each vote; now used in New York, Virginia and Louisiana primarily; these machines are no longer made

Mark-sense or Marksense: Voting system where dark marks are made on a paper ballot, then scanned by various types of machinery; also known as "Optical Scan" or OS, as opposed to the earlier (pre-1960's) electronic sensing systems that read the conductivity of pencil marks; optical systems read the shade (lightness/darkness) of the mark, not its electrical properties

NASED: National Association of State Election Directors, with the Secretariat of this group being in Texas; they are supposed to certify that your election voting system is "safe" and free from tamperability (Note: their new website has only one contact person, whose city and state are not given; see Bev Harris's website , p. 5, for a list of NASED officials; the Secretariat is/was R. Doug Lewis in Houston, TX electioncent@pdq.net)

OS: Optical Scan, a voting system where ballots are marked by the voter, then put through a scanning machine that reads the marks and tallies the results; the most widely-used type of US voting system; also known as "Marksense"; there are several types of scanning machines; most counties in the US have the ballots brought to the central county location, and all the scanning is done there ("centralized tabulating"), as opposed to being counted right at the polling place as is or was done with paper ballots

Paper Ballots: forms printed on paper or cardstock listing candidates names, and election choices, and including places to mark one's choice; known as Australian ballots, because were perfected there first; are filled out in privacy and put into a sealed ballot box; counted by hand

Paper Trail: = ballots! If voters cast paper ballots, these can always be recounted, thus keeping the election honest. When voters use computerized voting machines, there's no proof that what the voter chose is what got counted (even if the voter gets a paper record, that will not help, since it would be impossible to collect all these papers from voters and recount them)

Polling place: the place where people go to vote; the voting place; in the US, these are often in schools and other official, easily-accessible locations; also known as "the polls," not to be confused with surveys taken to find out public opinion

Polls: (1) surveys taken by asking people certain choices, for the purpose of finding out the generally-held views of a group of people; (2) the place where people go to vote; the voting place; in the US, these are often in schools and other official, easily-accessible locations

Public Commons: the rightful gathering places of the public; the entire vote-counting process is supposed to take place here, in full view of members of the public, and never be hidden from public view, as it is today with computerized counting machines of all kinds, which system is causing increasing secrecy of the vote-counting process away from public accessibility

RAS: Remote Access Server, a type of phone-number-accessed server, run on Windows, which is very easy for computer folks to enter; the centralized vote counting programs used in the November 2 Presidential Election were linked through RAS systems, meaning that anyone, anywhere in the world, could get in, change vote counts, and leave without much of a trace, according to Bev Harris

Server: a computer that "serves" to link many computers together, forming the "Internet"; a server is just another computer, like yours or mine, that has server software on it; the huge net of servers forms the Internet; you can "see" the Internet connecting you to a distant website --- go to Start, Run, type in cmd, hit OK, then in the black window, type tracert, then a space, then the domain name of the website you want to see the path to (e.g., www.craigslist.org); hit "Enter"

TS: Touch Screen, a ballotless voting system where the voter touches the computer screen to select his/her choice; a type of DRE system

Votomatic: punch card voting system that has nothing except numbers printed on the ballot cards; one punches the card at the numbers that correspond to the choices on a separate display


  

Get your Car or Truck...UNSTUCK!
With
Lions Grip
Traction Pads
tm