Monday, September 05, 2005

OVC Celebrates Illinois Governor Signing Open Voting Law

We have to acknowledge every small win and this may be bigger than it seems. I'm posting another verbatim announcement, this one from OVC president Alan Dechert.

**

Previously, we reported that Illinois Hourse Bill 1968 had passed the state legislature. As of AUG 22, it is law -- Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich (Dem) signed it into law!

The part of interest to Open Voting is a just a few lines -- but potentially very powerful.

See HB1968
http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/94/HB/09400HB1968enr.htm

The relevant section is on page 186, lines 19 through 25, and it reads as follows:

19 All test plans, test results,
20 documentation, and other records used to plan, execute, and
21 record the results of the testing and verification, including
22 all material prepared or used by independent testing
23 authorities or other third parties, shall be made part of the
24 public record and shall be freely available via the Internet
25 and paper copy to anyone.

Thanks to Cook County consultant and friend of OVC, Kevin McDermott, for writing the text.

The new law is likely to be challenged in court to determine exactly what vendors and test authorities have to turn over. I think the text is reasonably comprehensive. A fair interpretation would mean that source code would have to be published since some aspects of testing done by the test labs require the source code.

I suggested slighly more detailed "OpenTest" language but too late for inclusion in the Illinois bill:

***** begin proposed expanded language for bill
Before a voting system is used in an election, all test plans, all automated and manual scripts, test results, and all information needed to reproduce these test results, documentation, bug tracking database, and other records used to plan, execute, and record the results of the testing and verification, including all material prepared or used by voting system testing laboratories or independent testing authorities or other third parties, shall be made part of the public record and shall be freely available via the Internet and paper copy to anyone.
****** end

The more states that get this into law, the more likely vendors and test labs will be forced to open up the whole process.

There is an educational process involved here. Recently, an OVC supporter in Ohio discussed OpenTest with Keith Cunningham, Director of the Allen County Board of Elections. Cunningham claimed that testing was already "public." I wrote Cunningham a letter:

http://www.openvotingconsortium.org/ad/cunningham815.pdf

People from about 20 states so far have expressed willingness to help get OpenTest introduced in their state legislature. Onward! We have nothing to lose but proprietary secret voting systems.

Thanks again.

Alan Dechert
President, Open Voting Consortium
http://openvoting.org
alan@openvoting.org
9560 Windrose Lane
Granite Bay, CA 95746
916-791-0456

0 comments

0 Comments:

Post a Comment Top of Page / GuvWurld Blog Home Page

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?