It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Rasobasi420
I've always believed that voting never solved anything.
Originally posted by thelibra
If the majority of the registered voters went to the polls in each and every election,
then no amount of manipulation or fraud could get a falsely elected candidate into office except under two circumstances:
The nation was TRULY split enough to make it a very narrow margin, in which case, either party is going to be utterly convinced their side "really" won, regardless of whether or not vote fraud took place.
The vote fraud would be immediately noticable enough on a scale where the election results could be annulled as fraudulent.
Who the hell do you think is out there voting? Martians? Shadow People? Reptillians? Bloody Hell!!!
Originally posted by MrPenny
Originally posted by jsobecky
It's safe, it's trusted, and it works.
You mean like Microsoft products, and the Internet in general?
Originally posted by jsobecky
I disagree. The concept was, and is, a good one.
I really disagree with you here. The concept of not having a paper trail is a good one to you? Or no way of finding out what went wrong if something has? Not me.
I wouldn't mind the machines so much if they actually left a trail should something go wrong. Funnily enough, right before the election, they passed a bill making it ok for these machines to not have a paper trail. Hmm....Republicans run Congress at the moment....wonder why they passed this bill?
I still don't see a conspiracy.
See above.
The states may have bought them bipartisanly, but who decided where each machine would go? Some politician somewhere had to decide this. And I believe in Ohio it was Blackwell...hmm...a republican.
Space travel is safe? Let's ask the Apollo 13 crew how safe it was. How about the crew of the Space Shuttle...both that blew up in mid air. Safe...indeed.
So I'm still not convinced of any conspiracy.
Don't take this the wrong way please, but I feel unless Bush comes on TV and says "I did it" then you won't. There have already been at least 2 wistleblowers on these "patches" and you still don't believe....so there you go.
originally posted by Sri Oracle
On the subject of Diebold:
One of my tenents is a phd computer programmer for the government/military. He is convinced of the simplicity and probability of vote tampering on electronic voting machines. On the level of hearsay, he has associates that actually work with these Diebold machines who say that they are "designed to be easily tampered with by the powers that be". The code that these machines run on is kept secret from the public for national security reasons? Please. If it is supposed to benefit the people why is the source code secured AWAY FROM the people? Checks and balances?
Originally posted by jsobecky
Is Microsoft the extent of your knowledge of Operating Systems and applications? If so, then I understand your confusion and distrust.
Originally posted by Griff
[And I believe in Ohio it was Blackwell...hmm...a republican.
Originally posted by jsobecky
originally posted by Sri Oracle
On the subject of Diebold:
One of my tenents is a phd computer programmer for the government/military. He is convinced of the simplicity and probability of vote tampering on electronic voting machines. On the level of hearsay, he has associates that actually work with these Diebold machines who say that they are "designed to be easily tampered with by the powers that be". The code that these machines run on is kept secret from the public for national security reasons? Please. If it is supposed to benefit the people why is the source code secured AWAY FROM the people? Checks and balances?
Ask your tenent (sic) how many programs that you buy come complete with the source code.
Originally posted by MrPenny
I wish, because where that is the case, ignorance is bliss. The reality is, no operating system is perfectly secure, nor is any network perfectly secure. And any software designed and written by people can never be completely trusted. If the source code for these devices is not open and reviewable, it cannot be trusted.
Originally posted by deluded
That's not the point (and I think you know it). The point is this is the most critical software we have employed to date in this country and there should be better checks and balances and much better oversight. Stay focused please.
Originally posted by jsobecky
The opposite is true. Put the source code out in the open and it will be hacked within an hour.
I don't know if you're implying that the programmers would deliberately sabotage the software. Are you?
Six days prior to the election, a poll commissioned by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution showed Democrat Roy Barnes running 11 points ahead of Republican Purdue (51%-40%). The same poll had Democrat Max Cleland leading Republican Chambliss 49%-44%.
On Election Day in November 2002, Sonny Purdue took 51% of the vote (an 11-point swing) , and Chambliss won with 53% (a 9 point swing).
www.countthevote.org...
Since the 1970’s, residents of Sandy Springs have waged a long running battle to incorporate their own city. They were repeatedly foiled by the Democrats, but when control of state government switched to the Republicans after the 2002 and 2004 election, the movement to create the city picked up steam.
The General Assembly approved creation of the city in 2005.
en.wikipedia.org...
Originally posted by SkepticOverlord
That's not quite the case with Open Source Software (OSS). Current LINUX operating systems are open source and very secure. The diverse community of developers would not only provide a more secure solution, but the inherent checks and balances would ensure no improper code would get in.
Don't know about him... but I am. Maybe not the work-a-day developers, but certainly one or two senior software engineers under the direction of management.
Originally posted by jsobecky
It's nowhere near "the most critical software we have employed to date in this country". Where did you get such a notion?
[edit on 3-10-2006 by jsobecky]
Originally posted by jsobecky
Well, Griff, you just go back through everything that I posted and please point out to me where I said that a paper trail is not a good idea.
Go on, now. Go find it.
Give up yet? Good. Then don't say things that aren't true.
Give me the bill number. I'd like to look up who voted for it.
Now you're really grasping at straws...
I think you're referring to the Space Shuttle Challenger. It failed because of O-ring failure; it was too cold to launch, but they did it anyway.
Design failure compounded by human error.
Don't take this wrong, but I feel that you're ready to accept any theory out there as long as demonizes Bush. At least I ask if it makes sense; you accept things at face value because it's what you want to believe.
See, that's the problem with many posters here. If somebody does not readily accept that Bush is the cause of every single problem in the world, then they must be a right-wing neo-con Christian fundamentalist Republican.
Don't let others do your thinking for you.