| Date: | Tuesday August 05, @05:25AM |
|---|---|
| Author: | ewing2001 |
| Topic: | News |
| from the Scoop/BlackBoxVoting dept. | |
Voting Company Reverses Stand:
Flawed software WAS used in Georgia and other elections
- There are “kinks” in touch screens
According to an Aug. 4 article in Wired.com: Diebold company spokesman Mike Jacobsen “confirmed that the source code Rubin's team examined was last used in November 2002 general elections in Georgia, Maryland and in counties in California and Kansas.”
Actually, the software may have been used in as many as 13 states and 197 counties, according to Diebold documents given to Santa Clara County in Feb. 2003 - list of counties at bottom.
Earlier, Diebold had told reporters that the software which contained “stunning security flaws” that made hacking easy, was an older version and never used in any election.
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printed from Voting Fraud: Flawed software WAS used in Georgia on 2004-05-01 00:09:00