Actually, one of my professors was responsible for the state of Maryland's team of IT professionals who investigated Diebold's machine. They found it was hideously flawed, in quite a large number of ways, and they could have done more or less anything they wanted with it.
It's certainly possible to make secure electronic voting a reality - the problem is that the companies with the money that give it a shot don't know two figs about security.
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Eat antimatter, Posleen-boy!
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