Archive for September, 2006

Pull the Plug by Avriel Rubin

September 5, 2006

So, the Chavistas say, we have the safest electronic voting system in the world, sure, ask the experts, they don’t believe such an animal exists:

Pull the Plug by Avriel Rubin in Forbes

I am a computer scientist. I own seven
Macintosh computers, one Windows machine and a Palm Treo 700p with a
GPS unit, and I chose my car (Infiniti M35x) because it had the most
gadgets of any vehicle in its class. My 7-year-old daughter uses
e-mail. So why am I advocating the use of 17th-century technology for
voting in the 21st century–as one of my critics puts it?

The 2000 debacle in Florida spurred a rush to
computerize voting. In 2002 Congress passed the Help America Vote Act,
which handed out $2.6 billion to spend on voting machines. Most of that
cash was used to acquire Direct Recording Electronic voting machines.

Yet while computers are very proficient at
counting, displaying choices and producing records, we should not rely
on computers alone to count votes in public elections. The people who
program them make mistakes, and, safeguards aside, they are more
vulnerable to manipulation than most people realize. Even an event as
common as a power glitch could cause a hard disk to fail or a magnetic
card that holds votes to permanently lose its data. The only remedy
then: Ask voters to come back to the polls. In a 2003 election in Boone
County, Ind., DREs recorded 144,000 votes in one precinct populated
with fewer than 6,000 registered voters. Though election officials
caught the error, it’s easy to imagine a scenario where such mistakes
would go undetected until after a victor has been declared.

Consider one simple mode of attack that has already proved effective on a widely used DRE, the Accuvote made by Diebold.
It’s called overwriting the boot loader, the software that runs first
when the machine is booted up. The boot loader controls which operating
system loads, so it is the most security-critical piece of the machine.
In overwriting it an attacker can, for example, make the machine count
every fifth Republican vote as a Democratic vote, swap the vote outcome
at the end of the election or produce a completely fabricated result.
To stage this attack, a night janitor at the polling place would need
only a few seconds’ worth of access to the computer’s memory card slot.

Further, an attacker can modify what’s known
as the ballot definition file on the memory card. The outcome: Votes
for two candidates for a particular office are swapped. This attack
works by programming the software to recognize the precinct number
where the machine is situated. If the attack code limits its execution
to precincts that are statistically close but still favor a particular
party, it goes unnoticed.

One might argue that one way to prevent this
attack is to randomize the precinct numbers inside the software. But
that’s an argument made in hindsight. If the defense against the attack
is not built into the voting system, the attack will work, and there
are virtually limitless ways to attack a system. And let’s not count on
hiring 24-hour security guards to protect voting machines.

DREs have a transparency problem: You can’t
easily discover if they’ve been tinkered with. It’s one thing to
suspect that officials have miscounted hanging chads but something else
entirely for people to wonder whether a corrupt programmer working
behind the scenes has rigged a computer to help his side.

My ideal system isn’t entirely Luddite. It
physically separates the candidate selection process from vote casting.
Voters make their selections on a touchscreen machine, but the machine
does not tabulate votes. It simply prints out paper ballots with the
voters’ choices marked. The voters review the paper ballots to make
sure the votes have been properly recorded. Then the votes are counted;
one way is by running them through an optical scanner. After the polls
close, some number of precincts are chosen at random, and the ballots
are hand counted and compared with the optical scan totals to make sure
they are accurate. The beauty of this system is that it leaves a
tangible audit trail. Even the designer of the system cannot cheat if
the voters check the printed ballots and if the optical scanners are
audited.

Aviel Rubin, professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University and author of Brave New Ballot: The Battle To Safeguard Democracy In The Age Of Electronic Voting.

Who is afraid of Zulia state?

September 5, 2006

Chavez’ triumphal (??) return to Zulia state has been moved from the open air and smallish Maracaibo bullfighting arena, to the closed in, roofed and even smaller Palace of Events which barely holds 2,500 people.

Things that make you go umpf!

Mexican and Venezuelan elections:, Similarities are not even coincidental

September 5, 2006


I find it
somewhat funny and ironic how both Chavistas and opposition politicians seem to
avoid and skirt any discussion of what has happened in Mexico ever since the
Presidential election two moths ago, which culminated today with the ruling by
the Electoral Court that Felipe Calderon had won.

This blog
is about Venezuela
and I avoid talking about issues that do not focus on my country, but I think
it is a little bit silly for our politicians to avoid the topic.

Chavistas
avoid it, because they do not want the same principles applied to them. When Lopez
Obrador demands a recount of all the ballots, this goes to the crux of the oppositions
arguments for counting all of the ballots in Venezuela, which Chavistas have refused
to do over and over, despite the fact that it would have cleared up many
uncertainties, as well as making people more confident on the voting system.

The
opposition has also avoided the subject, apparently because they do not sympathize
with Lopez Obrador, who is asking for the recounting of all the votes. Thus their
silence.

I found
both positions incredibly superficial and stupid There are very few
coincidences in the two cases and few similarities, to wit:

1)     
The
Electoral Court
in Mexico was appointed when
PRI was dominant in Mexico
ten years ago and it can hardly be called partisan for the party that
essentially forced PRI out of the electoral picture in Mexico.

2)     
All
decisions by the Court were unanimous, in contrast with the fact that all difficult
CNE decisions during the recall petition, recall referendum and subsequent
elections were decided by either a 3-2 vote, prior to the current CNE and
4-1 since the new one with four clearly pro-Chavez members was appointed.

3)     
Perhaps
the most important point, all votes were actually counted in the Mexican
election at least once, something that has never been done in Venezuela since
the new voting machines were acquired. Lopez Obrador is asking that all votes
be recounted, whether they are under question or not. (Under a Supreme Court
ruling in Mexico,
a complete recount implies the election is invalid and a new one needs to be
held)

4)     
The
Electoral Court
recounted all tallies with both parties having copies of them, something that
has not happened in Venezuela
since the 2000 Presidential election, so that it has been impossible to even check
that the sum of the tallies is correct

5)     
The
Electoral Court
in Mexico
recounted 9% of the ballots, which were all of the cases that were submitted to
it in which there were charges of errors, evidence of fraud or specific
evidence that there may be a problem. Close to a quarter million votes were
disqualified in this recount.

Thus, the
suggestion that there is any similarity between what happens in Venezuela and what has happened in Mexico is
purely coincidental, just a full counting of the votes would have made a huge
difference socially and politically in the Venezuelan recall vote and recent
elections. Thus, our politicians on both sides should be more honest and be capable of  studying, discussing and understanding these issues. We need it to survive as a Nation.

Fascism and intolerance are routine for the revolution

September 5, 2006

And speaking of fascism and intolerance we begin where we left off last night as Rosales’ rally in Vargas state was blocked today by pro-Chavez groups, who stormed the rally throwing empty bottles and stones at the participants. The anti-riot police allowed the agression to continue without intervention.

Fascism, intolerance and disrespect for the rights of others are the daily hallmarks of Chavismo.

The Goebbelian spokesmen of the revolution show their true fascist and partial colors

September 4, 2006

CNE Board member Vicente Diaz accused the telecom regulator of being and acting partially in favor of the Government and Chavez’ MVR. Diaz said that on July 25th. he requested, as part of his responsabilities within the CNE, from the CONATEL office a video transmitted by Government’s TV station VTV and he has yet to receive it. In contrast, the Head of Chavez’ campaign committee Francisco Ameliach asked for a video trasmitted on August 24th. and not only did he get it, but CONATEL viisted a number of TV stations today checking for another one in which the actions of an opposition candidate are questioned. Diaz also criticized that the Head of CONATEL was at Friday’s pro-Chavez rally, during working hours, wearing a red t-shirt and gave statements to the Government’s TV station during the rally. He called this improper, unethical and a violation of the regulations.

Of course, the equally partial President of the CNE said in defense of COANTEL, that while electoral matters where the domain of the CNE, subliminal ads were that of CONATEL, in order to justify the actions by CONATEL, in particular those today against Globovision. She did not explain what would happen if it is a “subliminal electoral” ad.

This is all of the same type of fascist and Goebbelian behavior by this outlaw Government. When Barreto insulted the middle class and the Mayors of the municipalities run by Primero Justicia, the People’s Ombudsman sided with Barreto, in clear proof of the partiality of the officials of this Government. He is being denouced to international authorities for his inaction.

Chavez and his party control all branches of Government, control all of the funds, abuse their power daily and they show up daily on TV saying they are the victims. Meanwhile the Minister of Information, who happens to be also the official spokesman for Chavez’ MVR party, says that the coverage by state media is completely balanced.

Daniel asks in his latest post: Is Fascism the New Left? My feeling is that it is the other way around, the new left is simply fascist, intolerant, could care less for human rights or the enviroment and wants to impose their views. If you don’t agree with them, you are not only their enemy, but they will attempt to wipe you out legally or otherwise. To them the end justifies the means. They do not obey their own rules and they believe that if they tell a lie a thousand times, it will become the truth.

The Chavez Government and its Goebbelian spokesmen are the best example of that. The new Bolivian and Mexican left are simply trying to follow.

Flowering picking up

September 4, 2006

Flowering is starting to pick up as I finished repotting all the plants. Some I have posted recently, so instead I am posting the more novel (to this page) ones.

Above left, Cattleya Gaskelliana “Manhattan Blue” I got this seedling three years ago and it is the firts time it flowers, the color is exquisite, a true “coerulea”, but the shape in this first flowering is a little bent out of shape, particularly the middle sepal. Love the color though and hope the second time it will be better. On the right, Colmanara “Red Fantasy”, I used to have a few of these where I lived before, but they seem to like it less here because it is more humid. This is the perfect plant for a beginner, beautiful, easy to grow and flowers regularly.

Top left, Oncidium Gower Ramsey, the most common hybrid there is. On the right a Dendrobium with no label. I am no expert on these , have about three of them and all have dropped the labels. Oh well! Enjoy!

A pathetic performance by Hugo Chavez

September 4, 2006


One gets tired of blasting President Hugo Chavez, but his performance
yesterday during his now irregular Variety/Reality show “Alo Presidente” was nothing but simply pathetic. After avoiding
the issue of crime for almost eight years, Chavez only addressed the issue of
security in his last Sunday program a few weeks ago when he expressed his
concern for the pro-Chavez urban leaders that have been killed and he threatened
Minister of the Interior and Justice Chacon with firing him if things did not
improve.

Yesterday, he mentioned the problem of security again for only the
second time in almost eight years. This time, he asked the people to help protect the Cuban Doctors,
because one Cuban medical doctor, in Venezuela
for the Barrio Adentro program, was killed with a knife in the Caracas neighborhood of Petare. 90,000
Venezuelans have been killed under Chavez’ watch, practically tripling the
yearly number of 1998 when he first assumed power, Venezuela has become worse
than Colombia in terms of violent deaths, 40 Venezuelans die daily in violent
crimes and the number of people killed in police confrontations has gone up by
a factor of five, and all the autocrat seems to really care for are his
political buddies and Cuban doctors.

Whatever happened to the “pueblo” that he claims to live for and love
and gets murdered by Chavez’ own police? Whatever happened to the adolescents
that are terrorized, abused and murdered by Chavez own police? To the soldiers
tortured and abused by his own military officers? Why hasn’t Chavez ever called
for anyone to protect them? Why didn’t Chavez raise his cry of alarm when those
terrible cases occurred? Why doesn’t he care about the rest of us? Wasn’t it Hugo Chavez who seven years ago justified robbery by the poor in order to feed yourself?

And to top it all off, he reacts like an irresponsible adolescent,
blaming everything except his inaction, incompetence and inefficiency for the
problem. He blamed it on the media that supposedly stimulates alcohol and dug
consumption, as if alcohol and drugs could be advertised, or as if he did not
send his goons to the media every time his Government disagreed with something
they said, whether explicit or not.

In fact, only today, the telecom regulator CONATEL visited the offices of
a number of TV channels to investigate some “subliminal” ads by opposition
candidate Rosales, as if they had nothing better to do, or as if it was not
Chavez and his Miranda Command that
were abusing the campaign rules
, daily, really, subliminally and in any
other possible manner. In fact, it was shown that last Friday, 94%-plus of the
time in the Government TV station VTV, was devoted to you know who, Hugo
Chavez, in flgranta and grotesque violation fo the cmapign laws.

Chavez even scolded the mayors for allowing people to drink on the
streets, as if he had not been present in his own rally last Friday, where
hundreds were openly drinking beer and rhum on the streets as they cheered. Of
course, get rid of the booze and
attendance would drop dramatically, more than it already has, as it is one of
the main enticements used by the Chavistas leaders to get people to attend.

But he can’t blame the media, the alcohol and the catholic nature of
our country (He praised Muslim countries for banning drinking) for the terror Venezuelans and in a lesser scale the Cuban Doctors
are living. He is responsible for the whole problem. It was Hugo Chavez and his
cohorts that dismantled professional police forces, one after another, to put
their own mediocre former and retired military in charge of a problem they had
no clue or inkling about. Yes, the same military that are responsible for the sharp
increase in the imports of Scotch in Venezuela, at the official exchange
rate and which is sold at special prices at all military commissaries. But we
do not hear Chavez saying anything about it, they might get mad at him and who
knows what they might do!! That is the cynicism of Chavez and his revolution at
its worst!!

But the truth is that Venezuela
has become utter chaos under the stupidity and egocentricity of Hugo Chavez. He
goes all the way to China
to promote the country’s candidacy for the UN Security Council, which does not
even carry a vote. And maybe by now there was nobody at the foreign office,
since most careers diplomats have been fired, that could tell the autocrat that
Venezuela’s competition in
the vote, Guatemala, does
not even have diplomatic relations with China,
as that country recognizes Taiwan.
But he went, and in his absence, more than 480 Venezuelans died while he
traveled, he signed in one day almost as many agreements as there were dead
Venezuelans that day. But recall the agreements signed by him during his last
trip to China?
Shelved, filed and forgotten in who knows whose office or boxes, since there
has been such a high rotation in the Foreign Ministry, that nobody there went
to China the last time Chavez did..

And you have to wonder about Chavez’ mental stability. He can’t stand
being in the country, where he is no longer the type of leader that can walk merrily
among the crowds of his supporters, which are still strong. He cares little for
trying to solve or solving their problems, he is surrounded my men and woman
that do nothing but suck up to him, painting a reality that is far from the
truth. He trusts nobody, so he simply rotates the same incompetent and
inefficient men and women around him, mostly former military or simply adorers
that would never tell him what the is really happening. Yesterday he said poverty is down 30% sibce he took over, as of the poor don’t know how they are doing and aksed for more ideology, when people are simply asking for a better standard of living, inclduing their personal security.

And if Chavez can’t tell what is going on, then he does not deserve to
be in the position he occupies. It has been seven plus long years of waste,
corruption, inefficiency and lies.
Inflation is jumping up due to the mismanagement of the economy. People
are unhappy as the numerous protests show. In one week, the workers of the 100%
Chavista National Assembly voted in the
opposition union by a three to one vote and the members of the savings plan of
the Electoral Board (CNE) voted with 99% of the votes against the
administration of their money under Francisco Carrasquero and Jorge Rodriguez. You
have to wonder is Chavez has been told.

But in the end, the most pathetic aspect of his rant yesterday was how
he ducked his responsibility and asked the people to defend the Cuban Doctors.
That is what Government’s are responsible for, that is what Government’s do and
are supposed to do. Any Government is responsible for the well being of all its
citizens, pro or against. Chavez is not in the opposition, he has been in
charge of running the country for almost seven years, but he appears not to
have assumed his responsibility fully. Simply, because he does not care, Hugo
Chavez only cares about Hugo Chavez, the power, the adoration, the perks, the
travel.

But people are getting the message. They are beginning to understand that
Venezuela
needs a President for all. Someone that respects and cares for them. Someone that
will work for them and not that pathetic figure we saw yesterday that cares
more for Fidel and his people and asks others to assume the responsibilities he
was elected for.

September 3, 2006

Nobody has spent as much time and effor in understaing poverty and its causes in Venezuela as Luis Pedro España form the Catholic University. But the Government does not use his knowledge, the result of careful studies and lots of work over the years. This article says it all, it is the well off in the country that have benefitted most from the current oil windfall. But beware, being in the top 30% of income in Venezuelas does not mean that you are really doing that great.That is part of the tragedy.

The consequences
of prosperity
by
Luis Pedro España in El Nacional

How do you explain that with so much oil income in the last
three years, the levels of poverty are similar to those of 1999? This is the q
uestion
that is made by all external observers that come to explore the social
conditions in Venezuela.
If the above is hard to understand, imagine what it would be explaining that in
these years of revolutionary Government, inequality has actually  increased.

The spokesmen for official figures only show the numbers that are
convenient to them. When in 2004 the numbers showed the collapse that family
income suffered between 2002 and 2003, the Government was looking for different
figures to show the “recovery” of the situation. Today, when the boom of income
makes it such that poverty statistics smile for the Government, that
methodology stopped being neo-liberal and the enemy of the regime, to begin to
be shown in the face of any criticism. The structural variables of IBS have
been left aside, because today, using those, we are in the same place we were in terms of overcoming poverty

As we said before, we are facing growth in income, but not in
production. Families can have a little more real income compared to 2003, but
the collapse of the national economy is such that that private investment, both
local and foreign, has just disappeared.

Without investment, there is no employment and without employment what
you have is poverty. The structural causes of poverty remain intact. There are
no opportunities of good employment, well paid and with other labor benefits
and they are not there because of the lack of investment. But there are no conditions either for
Venezuelans of low income to have access to the few good jobs that there exist
in the country. The whole system for providing social services is as scant and
bad as it was in the past and it is not true that the missions are going to make a
difference.

Since in Venezuela
national income has two components, oil and non-oil, what has improved the
real income of families can be attributed to oil and its distribution mechanisms.
The latter takes us to the topic of the distribution of income and inequality.
The new inequality that has actually appeared in Venezuela.

The last accounting that the Institute for Economic Research of UCAB
has, shows that the distribution of income has worsened in the last three years.
Not much, because the structure for distribution does not change overnight, but
it certainly draws your attention that the strata for which it has improved is
for the 30% of the population with the higher income on the country. No matter
how much of a populist discourse you may have, the economic and social policy
of the Government has not managed to favor in a larger measure the status of
the poorest. The income of all strata have improved, but in particular that of
those that belong to the formal economy, to the 30% that has the highest
income, to the 30% that structurally is not poor.

It is not true that the missions are boosting popular sectors. On the
average only 9% of the income of families comes from these transfers and at
most, we estimate, that it may reach 12% in the poor sectors. The boom in
income that the country is experimenting is lived in the barrios not because of
the Government, but because of markets. There is more work, but the barrio is
not very productive. The economy demands more goods and services and the
workers of low of medium qualification are inserted through the informal
workforce or on their own. Thus, the improvement. But it has been the formal
economy the one that has been favored the most. Without programs that that
allow for an increase in the level of productivity of the poor, the demand will
continue to be provided by those that are already productive, that is, those
who are not poor.

It is not only market mechanisms that have increased the inequality as
a result of the absence of progressive social policies, but instead it has been
the social policies themselves that have contributed to the increase in
inequality. The policy of a sustained and compulsive minimum salary is a policy
that favors the bourgeois of the barrio, not the poor. The missions and their
populist mechanisms of selection are such, that it is the better informed and
capable in the barrio that can participate in hustling for the missions and its
grants. Using this mechanism, the waste of the prosperity will at least be the same
as the waste of those in the past. But may God free us from a recession in oil prices; no democracy
will be able to handle the end of the prosperity.

Good news Sunday

September 3, 2006

Yes, sometimes there are news to make us proud:

–The Boston Globe profiles Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel and indirectly the wonderful otrchestra program of Jose Antonio Abreu, which proves you can make programs and policies for everyone.(Thanks M.)

–The New York Times profiles Charles Brewer Carias, an old fashioned explorer in the XXIst. Century. (He was my dentist when I was young)

–Venezuela Johan Santana will likely win the Amercan League’s Cy Young Award.

–For the first time in history, a woman scientist, micologist Gioconda Cunto de San Blas, will occupy one of the numbered seats at the Venezuelan Academy of Sciences. Well deserved and about time it happened.

Narvaez Square under the negligent supervision of the revolution

September 2, 2006

In 1982 when the subway station in La Hoyada in downtown Caracas was opened, the Metro de Caracas honored artist Francisco Narvaez
by creating the Narvaez Plaza and placing a sculpture by him which perhaps could be considered today to be
ironically called “Harmony of volume and space” in the middle of the
square. This is a picture of the square, the sculpture and the entrance
to the subway circa 1999:

Due
to the populist nature of the Government, the Mayor of the Libertador
District of Caracas allowed street vendors to invade numerous public
places in the cities to sell their wares. The Plaza Narvaez was one of
those places invaded. The Mayor of that district appears to have since
regretted what he did, attempting to move street vendors from certain
areas. A year ago, they claimed they would clear Narvaez Plaza, but so
far they have apparently made no effort to do so. The sculpture sits
there, in the middle of the stalls, as if trying not to drown in the
sea of tin and canvas roofs:

Little
needs to be said, this is what happens when populism, negligence and
incompetence take over. This is another accomplishment of the “pretty”
revolution.(Thanks Freddy F.and not Bernal)