- Mon Nov 3 2008 E-voting worries linger as Election Day nears
A 2002 federal law encouraged states to buy touch-screen voting machines. Millions of dollars later, some states are ditching the devices in favor of old-fashioned paper ballots and optical scanning.
Posted by Declan McCullagh
- Mon Nov 1 2004 The big election beta test
Ready or not, here comes electronic voting.
Posted by Robert Lemos
- Wed Oct 22 2008 The presidential election
Why should anyone care about broadband policy when the economy's melting down? CNET's chief political correspondent, Declan McCullagh, explains why and answers your questions on this edition of Editor...
Posted by Declan McCullagh and Brian Tong
- Thu May 20 2004 Fight over e-voting leaves election plans as casualties
Voters brace for confusion at the polls as county election officials scramble to address alleged shortcomings of new equipment.
Posted by Robert Lemos and Paul Festa
- Wed Apr 21 2004 Voting panel grills Diebold
The elections systems vendor comes under fierce questioning the day after a staff report for the California secretary of state charged it with breaking state elections law.
Posted by Paul Festa
- Thu Apr 22 2004 California votes against Diebold
State election officials recommend decertifying some of the company's voting machines after an investigation confirms that errors were made.
Posted by Paul Festa
- Mon Nov 1 2004 Election 2004: Count tech in
From e-voting to blogging to a cell phone poll, technology is helping reshape the political landscape.
Posted by CNET Staff
- Tue Jun 8 2004 High hopes for unscrambling the vote
Computer scientists are developing cryptography techniques that promise powerful new tools for verifying computerized voting results--but will they work in real elections?
Posted by Declan McCullagh
- Thu Oct 28 2004 Stamp of reproval for e-voting systems
Electronic voting machines are getting only scant testing and security review. What does that mean for Election Day?
Posted by CNET Staff
- Fri Dec 1 2006 Report: Paperless e-voting is not secure
Advisory agency to federal election standards commission dismisses most e-voting machines, but leaves door open for new technology.
Posted by Candace Lombardi