As the UK prepares to try its hand at
new ways of
electronic voting, one of the largest makers of e-voting machines in the US
is fighting off rumours that it wants to quit the business.
Diebold,
which deployed more than 130,000 voting machines during last November's US
election, is said to be mulling over severing ties with its e-voting subsidiary,
according to a report by
Associated
Press.
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Diebold has long been a target for critics of electronic voting systems, most
notably due to the absence of paper receipts in its machines and the strong ties
of former chief executive Wally O'Dell with the Bush administration.
In 2004, the company was sued by the State of California over what the state
said were fraudulent claims made by Diebold.
Much of the speculation comes from Diebold's recent filing with the
US
Securities and Exchange Commission in which it cited "the failure of
governments to certify election systems products" as a possible risk factor for
the company.
Diebold stated in the filing that the inability of local and state
governments to properly adopt and implement the systems could harm the company's
reputation, and prompt it to "eliminate, modify or cancel components of our
services that could result in additional development costs and the possible loss
of revenue".
A Diebold spokesperson told
vnunet.com
that the company would be unveiling its plans for its electronic voting branch
later this year.
"Whatever long-term decision the company comes to regarding our future in the
voting business will be a strategic decision and will be made in the best
interests of the corporation, our shareholders and our customers in the
elections space," said the spokesperson.
The reports have led activists who have long been critical of the company to
claim victory.
"They have no one to blame but themselves for this," wrote David Allen,
activist and blogger for
BlackBoxVoting.com,
a site dedicated to monitoring corruption in e-voting systems.
Allen accused Diebold of spreading a "blizzard of lies and criminal
deceptions".
"It would be easier to sell Titanic brand cruise ships, or Hindenburg brand
zeppelins than a Diebold voting machine company," he wrote.
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