Folks, I'm part of a mixed crew monitoring the elections here in Maricopa County. We're looking for volunteers for LATE on election day and into the night (in some cases) to monitor critical areas in the election process that aren't being tracked. About me: I was a guest speaker at the recent conference covering the development of open-source voting systems. I run Ubuntu Intrepid personally (with a VirtualBox XP purely so I can take apart election databases) and I'm a member of TFUG (Tucson Free Users Group). I'm also a member of the board of directors at BlackBoxVoting.org - the group that was behind the HBO documentary "Hacking Democracy". What we need are two different types of volunteers, all registered AZ voters: 1) Those willing to work later into the night (starting at 7:00pm, going maybe to 11:00pm or later?) monitoring the 22 "regional receiving stations" where ballots come in from the field for modem uploads to the central tabulator. A recent Princeton study of a similar-tech-era Sequoia product in New Jersey says the memory cartridges ("electronic ballot boxes") can be hacked as there's zero crypto on the pack. Worse, the boxes and bags in which the ballot materials are shipped are absolutely pathetic in terms of physical access security. If possible, these people should have camcorders. 2) Those able to pull only a shorter shift can visit a polling place as it closes and photograph the end-of-day vote tallies as they come out of the precinct voting machines...before those votes can be hacked either in-route via memory card manipulation or at the central tabulator's MS-SQL database. These people need a decent (4 megapixel or better) still-image camera, to be used ONLY after all the voters are done (important!). We need as many people as we can get to a max of about 80, and the more tech-literate the better. Volunteers will get credentials from the Libertarian Party :) - the people involved are a mix of Dems and LP, with at least partial (well, a little bit grudging...) cooperation going on with the Dem party. IF some are available during the day, we could use a small crew going around checking for abnormally long lines in precincts with high college/minority demographics. Let me know if you can help with that. If interested please respond off-list with your name, phone #, Email addy and approximate location (so we can send you close). About me: a previous tech exam of the Maricopa voting system I was involved in is online at: http://www.bbvdocs.org/sequoia/Maricopa-County-Elections-Report.pdf Google my name ("Jim March") with any of the voting system vendors (esp. "Diebold") and you'll get scads of hits. This is very much "for real". Fun fact: the top voting software vendor isn't Diebold, Sequoia or the like: it's Microsoft. Windows is at the core of most of the systems, and their database stuff (often *Access* for God's sake) is inside most. Efforts to open the source code as a reform measure have run head-on into MS lobbying money; MS doesn't want to see a high-profile, high-security app like voting migrate to FOSS. Thanks to any who can help, Jim March --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss