Bill Wishon's News and Views

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Sequoia Announces Voting System with Published Code

Sequoia Voting Systems, one of the major e-voting companies, announced Tuesday that it will publish all of the source code for its forthcoming Frontier product. This is great news–an important step toward the kind of transparency that is necessary to make today’s voting systems trustworthy.

To be clear, this will not be a fully open source system, because it won’t give users the right to modify and redistribute the software. But it will be open in a very important sense, because everyone will be free to inspect, analyze, and discuss the code.

Significantly, the promise to publish code covers all of the systems involved in running the election and reporting results, “including precinct and central count digital optical scan tabulators, a robust election management and ballot preparation system, and tally, tabulation, and reporting applications”. I’m sure the research community will be eager to study this code.

The trend toward publishing election system source code has been building over the last few years. Security experts have long argued that public scrutiny tends to increase security, and is one of the best ways to justify public trust in a system. Independent studies of major voting vendors’ source code have found code quality to be disappointing at best, and vendors’ all-out resistance to any disclosure has eroded confidence further. Add to this an increasing number of independent open-source voting systems, and secret voting technologies start to look less and less viable, as the public starts insisting that longstanding principles of election transparency be extended to election technology. In short, the time had come for this step.

Still, Sequoia deserves a lot of credit for being the first major vendor to open its technology. How long until the other major vendors follow suit?


Netflix To Offer Streaming Only Package, But Profitability Will Be Hard To Come By

On Netflix’s Q3 earnings call, CEO Reed Hastings announced plans to take Netflix’s digital offering international, sometime in the second half of 2010. Reed said Netflix plans to roll out a streaming only offering by starting small in one market, proving the model and then expanding into other countries. While such an announcement probably comes as no surprise to anyone…


Telcos Threaten FCC With Spending Cuts

Telco policy hawks say they will slow broadband investments if the government decides to force them to treat network traffic impartially


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Noodle Goodness

Fave Comment: “Those things look like the bastard love children of marshmallow Peeps and Cabbage Patch kids.” – sara
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Sagan Remixed

Friends of mine know that I make no excuses for my hero worship of the late Carl Sagan. So I was excited to see that even he was not immune to the fad of Autotune mashups that have exploded onto the Internets: