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Calif.
settles with Diebold
BY
Michael Hardy
Published
on Nov. 11, 2004
A maker of
touch-screen voting machines has agreed to pay $2.6 million to
settle a lawsuit with California, company and state officials
announced. Diebold officials reached the settlement agreement
on behalf of its subsidiary, Diebold Election Systems.
Bill
Lockyer, California's attorney general, said Diebold officials
misled state leaders about the security and certification of
its products to get payments from the state.
"There
is no more fundamental right in our democracy than the right
to vote and have your vote counted," Lockyer said in a
statement. "In making false claims about its equipment,
Diebold treated that right, and the taxpayers who bought its
machines, cavalierly. This settlement holds Diebold
accountable and helps ensure the future quality and security
of its voting systems."
Diebold's
name has become synonymous with electronic voting, even though
several other companies also make touch-screen voting machines
and vote tabulators. It was Diebold's code that computer
scientists first raised security concerns about, and the
company's chief executive officer, Walden O'Dell, has been an
active Republican supporter who once promised in a
fund-raising letter to deliver Ohio's electoral votes for
President Bush. Consequently, e-voting skeptics have viewed
the company with suspicion.
Diebold
has had a rocky relationship with California officials, too.
Earlier this year, Secretary of State Kevin Shelley
decertified one of the company's products. Other Diebold
machines caused trouble in some precincts in the primary
election earlier this year and in the Nov. 2 general election.
Some machines failed to start, forcing some polling places to
open late or use paper ballots instead.
Under
the proposed settlement, still pending final approval, Diebold
must:
Pay
for the ballots and optical scanning equipment used during the
Nov. 2 general election in Kern, San Joaquin and San Diego
counties because the secretary of state had banned the use of
the Diebold machines installed in those counties.
Pay
for the cost of storing electronic representations of each
ballot cast on touch-screen voting units in Alameda, Plumas
and Los Angeles counties.
Pay
for tamper-resistant tape and 750 expanded memory cards in
Alameda County, at the request of county officials.
Install
upgraded touch-screen firmware in Alameda, Plumas and Los
Angeles counties, and upgraded vote tabulation software in all
counties using Diebold voting systems, at company expense.
Replace
hard-coded supervisor passwords with passwords that can be
changed and provide the needed instructions and training to
make sure that election officials know how to change the
passwords.
Replace
hard-coded encryption keys with keys that county officials can
program.
Be
prepared to reconfigure vote tabulation software for better
security when requested by county officials or provide
training so county officials can reconfigure the software
themselves.
The
settlement will prevent Diebold officials from connecting
voting systems to certain networks and transmitting official
election results via those networks, and it will forbid the
downloading of any software or firmware via the networks.
Company
officials also must provide documentation from independent
federal testing authorities to California's secretary of state
on demand, as well as information related to the development,
testing, installation and operation of its voting systems.
Thomas
Swidarski, senior vice president of strategic development and
global marketing for Diebold, said the company settled the
suit to avoid the distraction and cost of prolonged litigation
and the company's prime goal is to continue doing business
with California officials.
"While
we believe Diebold has strong responses to the claims raised
in the suit," he said in a statement, "we are
primarily interested in building an effective and trusting
relationship with California election officials so that we can
work together in building election solutions that address the
state's needs."
Link:
http://www.fcw.com/geb/articles/2004/1108/web-diebold-11-11-04.asp
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