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e-Voting: The silent decline of public control

Type
Video
Tags
election
Authors
Ulrich Wiesner
Event
Chaos Communication Congress 22th (22C3) 2005
Indexed on
Mar 27, 2013
URL
http://dewy.fem.tu-ilmenau.de/CCC/22C3/video/22C3-1134-en-the_silent_decline_of_public_control.mp4
File name
22C3-1134-en-the_silent_decline_of_public_control.mp4
File size
457.1 MB
MD5
ad3bd9f06a4d11bf0fd3b2ee6c5797fb
SHA1
7e72ad3cc35e80e5aec4373a00af4127db553590

The voting machines widely used in Germany's recent elections fail to follow both fundamental democratic principles and German legal requirements. Highlights of a recent Irish report on security issues of these machines will be provided. In this year's September elections of the Bundestag, more than 2 Million voters had to submit their vote using voting machines of the Dutch automation provider, Nedap. The machines, which have been subject to a (non-public) governmental certification process, do neither allow the voter to verify that his vote has been correctly stored, nor do they provide a transparent and auditable vote counting process. While the a specimen of the software has been reviewed as part of the certification process, the software installed on the Nedap machines is at no time subject to any authentication or validation by the German authorities. This is of specific interest, as a recent report of an Irish government commission claims that the implemented security measures mainly follow the concept "security by obscurity", and that two minutes of unauthorized access might be sufficient to replace the installed software.

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