On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 03:51:14PM -0300, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
> There are a lot of people who would like to buy people's votes
It's a good thing this does not happen in any other countries .
:-)
mcl
On 2015-10-12 2:51 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
Paul Koning wrote on Sat, 10 Oct 2015 11:44:58 -0400:
On Oct 9, 2015, at 5:39 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
[noticed voter ID terminal had cable to voting machines!]
That's not the real problem.
Indeed, not *the* problem but just *a* problem
> On Oct 12, 2015, at 2:51 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
>
> Paul Koning wrote on Sat, 10 Oct 2015 11:44:58 -0400:
> ...
>> The real problem is that you had no way to be sure, no way to verify,
>> that the machine was recording your vote and would accurately report
>> it later. It might just a
Paul Koning wrote on Sat, 10 Oct 2015 11:44:58 -0400:
> > On Oct 9, 2015, at 5:39 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
> > [noticed voter ID terminal had cable to voting machines!]
>
> That's not the real problem.
Indeed, not *the* problem but just *a* problem I noticed while still in
line to get into
On 10/10/2015 10:44 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
That's not the real problem. The real problem is that you had no way to be
sure, no way to verify, that the machine was recording your vote and would
accurately report it later. It might just as easily report numbers that
someone had told it to re
> On Oct 9, 2015, at 5:39 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. wrote:
>
> John Robertson asked:
>>> After the fiasco about the Deibold machines changing votes during the
>>> Bush election of 2000, Brazil opted for them?
>
> To which Alexandre Souza replied:
>>Yep. Welcome to the land of the stupid.
>
John Robertson asked:
> >After the fiasco about the Deibold machines changing votes during the
> >Bush election of 2000, Brazil opted for them?
To which Alexandre Souza replied:
> Yep. Welcome to the land of the stupid.
Ok, I think we need some facts, here. Note that from the very first time
On 2015-10-09 2:06 PM, Eric Christopherson wrote:
Forgive the question, but what is an "election vigil"? Just people
paying attention to the tallying at night after voting has closed?
Usually all day. It's a big deal for TV.
--Toby
Forgive the question, but what is an "election vigil"? Just people
paying attention to the tallying at night after voting has closed?
On Fri, Oct 9, 2015 at 10:55 AM, Alexandre Souza <
alexandre.tabaj...@gmail.com> wrote:
> After the fiasco about the Deibold machines changing votes during the Bush
>> election of 2000, Brazil opted for them?
>>
>
>Yep. Welcome to the land of the stupid.
>
The county I live in has paper ballo
After the fiasco about the Deibold machines changing votes during the
Bush election of 2000, Brazil opted for them?
Yep. Welcome to the land of the stupid.
On 10/09/2015 4:50 AM, Alexandre Souza wrote:
lucky you. In Brazil we use vote machines made by diebold, which are as
weak in security as a carton box. And no independent entity can ressearch
its failures.
After the fiasco about the Deibold machines changing votes during the
Bush election of 2
On 10/09/2015 07:38 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
Very convenient for those who run the government that runs the
election process.
In the state where I live the setup (by law, as I recall) is a nice
hybrid. Paper (mark sense) ballots, scanned by machine. But anyone
can look at a ballot and see what
On 10/09/2015 09:38 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
Very convenient for those who run the government that runs the election process.
In the state where I live the setup (by law, as I recall) is a nice hybrid.
Paper (mark sense) ballots, scanned by machine. But anyone can look at a
ballot and see wha
> On Oct 9, 2015, at 7:50 AM, Alexandre Souza
> wrote:
>
> lucky you. In Brazil we use vote machines made by diebold, which are as
> weak in security as a carton box. And no independent entity can ressearch
> its failures.
Very convenient for those who run the government that runs the election
lucky you. In Brazil we use vote machines made by diebold, which are as
weak in security as a carton box. And no independent entity can ressearch
its failures.
2015-10-09 8:24 GMT-03:00 Stefan Skoglund (lokal användare) <
a13st...@student.his.se>:
> tor 2015-10-08 klockan 16:48 -0700 skrev Chuck
tor 2015-10-08 klockan 16:48 -0700 skrev Chuck Guzis:
> On 10/08/2015 01:44 PM, Mattis Lind wrote:
> > Unfortunately SVT Öppet Arkiv is not available to anyone outside
> > Sweden, which is a pity. A great source.
> >
> > This interest for computers and election vigils come from the fact
> > that I
On 10/08/2015 01:44 PM, Mattis Lind wrote:
Unfortunately SVT Öppet Arkiv is not available to anyone outside
Sweden, which is a pity. A great source.
This interest for computers and election vigils come from the fact
that I had a email conversation with a person that was involved when
DEC won the
Unfortunately SVT Öppet Arkiv is not available to anyone outside Sweden,
which is a pity. A great source.
This interest for computers and election vigils come from the fact that I
had a email conversation with a person that was involved when DEC won the
contract to for the election in 1976 in Swed
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