The California based Election Science Institute recently conducted a study of Cuyahoga County's failed primary election and questioned the reliability of the Diebold systems used in that election and will be used by more than half of Ohio's voters in 46 counties on November 7.
Mark Radke, spokesman for Diebold, after reviewing the study and correcting what he referred to as "easily recognizable errors," stated that, "We feel we have proven our system to be extremely accurate."
One then reads in the September issue of Forbes Magazine an article by Aviel Rubin, computer science professor from Johns Hopkins University, and outspoken expert on computerized voting, who says, "Get ready for cheating chips and doctored drives."