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Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Ballots stuffed in online vote on state quarter design
Robotic computer program distorts results
OLYMPIA -- Talk about your two-bit schemes.
Robotic computer programs stuffed the online ballot boxes in a contest for Washington's official state quarter design over the weekend, forcing technicians to suspend voting Monday while they retooled the Web-based poll.
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| AP | ||
| These are the three proposed designs for Washington's official state quarter. Over the weekend, a computer program flooded the online voting to favor the design in the middle. | ||
State officials overseeing the balloting realized something was fishy when the poll, started Thursday, swelled to more than 1 million votes during the weekend.
The State Quarter Advisory Commission initially allowed an unlimited number of votes from a single Internet address so family members sharing a computer could each register their favorite, spokesman Mark Gerth said.
However, that philosophy was abandoned after the weekend's voting, which showed some computers casting repeated choices for a quarter design faster than humanly possible.
"You could sit there and watch 200 votes appear over the course of a couple of minutes, obviously going a little too fast," Gerth said.
Technicians reworking the Web site's computer code hoped to restore the poll by today.
Stefan Sharkansky, a computer software consultant and conservative blogger, noted the online poll's susceptibility to such automatic voting scripts Sunday after getting tips from readers.
"Clearly, the votes were going up by 20 a second, which is not a plausible number," Sharkansky said Monday.
"We hadn't counted on, I guess, the overenthusiasm of people," Gerth said.
The three quarter designs featured on the Web site are finalists to grace the reverse of Washington's official quarter, which is expected to be released by the U.S. Mint in March 2007.
The choices are:
The two designs featuring salmon also incorporate "The Evergreen State" as a motto.
The advisory commission, headed by honorary chairman and first gentleman Mike Gregoire, plans to consider the public polling when it chooses its favorite design.
That recommendation will be forwarded to Gov. Christine Gregoire, who has the final say.
The orca design was winning in the altered voting before officials pulled the plug, and technical workers were looking for ways to purge the clearly invalid votes from the totals before restarting the poll.
"If we can, we'll just leave in the legitimate votes," Gerth said.
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