Re: DC Security Geeks Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System
On Friday, September 26, 2003, at 06:42 AM, Ed Reed wrote: Grisham might be better - it's the legal wrangling that would tie up people's imagination, more than the technical. Major Variola (ret) [EMAIL PROTECTED] 9/25/2003 12:46:13 PM At 02:48 PM 9/24/03 -0400, R. A. Hettinga wrote: http://www.cryptonomicon.net/ modules.php?name=Newsfile=printsid=463 Cryptonomicon.Net - Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System Someone needs to inject a story about e-voting fraud into the popular imagination. Is Tom Clancy available? Maybe an anonymous, detailed, plausible, (but secretly fictional) blog describing how someone did this in their podunk county... then leak this to a news reporter.. Failure to be *able* to assure that this *didn't* happen in that podunk county would make an important point. There have already been reports of electronic votes being reported, mysteriously, before the election precincts closed. We know the results are often fixed, but reporting the results before the polls are closed sorts of makes the point obvious even to the sheeple. But, like the current hullaballoo about spam and telemarketing, the larger issues are not being discussed. Providing more sound bites about why Washington needs to be more successfully targeted by Al Qaida, with a lot more destruction than the paltry efforts we saw on 9/11, is boring. The focus of this list in recent months on political lobbying activities is wrong-headed. We need to be working on ways to make Big Brother powerless, either through technology or through destroying his nests and his tens of millions of helpers. The death of twenty million enablers and welfare addicts will be a very good thing. Burn, corpses, burn!! --Tim May
Re: DC Security Geeks Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System
Grisham might be better - it's the legal wrangling that would tie up people's imagination, more than the technical. Major Variola (ret) [EMAIL PROTECTED] 9/25/2003 12:46:13 PM At 02:48 PM 9/24/03 -0400, R. A. Hettinga wrote: http://www.cryptonomicon.net/modules.php?name=Newsfile=printsid=463 Cryptonomicon.Net - Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System Someone needs to inject a story about e-voting fraud into the popular imagination. Is Tom Clancy available? Maybe an anonymous, detailed, plausible, (but secretly fictional) blog describing how someone did this in their podunk county... then leak this to a news reporter.. Failure to be *able* to assure that this *didn't* happen in that podunk county would make an important point. On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. -- Charles Babbage - The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending unsubscribe cryptography to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: DC Security Geeks Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System
At 02:48 PM 9/24/03 -0400, R. A. Hettinga wrote: http://www.cryptonomicon.net/modules.php?name=Newsfile=printsid=463 Cryptonomicon.Net - Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System Someone needs to inject a story about e-voting fraud into the popular imagination. Is Tom Clancy available? Maybe an anonymous, detailed, plausible, (but secretly fictional) blog describing how someone did this in their podunk county... then leak this to a news reporter.. Failure to be *able* to assure that this *didn't* happen in that podunk county would make an important point. On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. -- Charles Babbage
[cdr] Re: DC Security Geeks Talk: Analysis of an Electronic Voting System
On Thursday 25 September 2003 12:46, Major Variola (ret) wrote: Someone needs to inject a story about e-voting fraud into the popular imagination. Is Tom Clancy available? Maybe an anonymous, detailed, plausible, (but secretly fictional) blog describing how someone did this in their podunk county... then leak this to a news reporter.. Think http://aflightrisk.com/. Take advantage of a blog's temporal immediacy and pick an election somewhere. Then chronicle the fraud as it progresses. Failure to be *able* to assure that this *didn't* happen in that podunk county would make an important point. I believe you are correct.