An interesting article describing the struggle againts black box e-voting in the Netherlands.
Written by my good friend Rop Gonggrijp (the driving force of the ‘against e-voting campaign’ in .NL).
(Source Wired. Originally published in 2600 magazine, Winter issue – #4, 2007)
What it means to be a hacker
by Rop Gonggrijp
My most recent confrontation with what it means to be a hacker started in March of 2006, after I went to vote for the local council of Amsterdam. At the polling station, I had to use a brand-new electronic voting machine that the city was renting from a company called Sdu. In fact, Amsterdam had contracted the entire election as a turnkey service, Sdu was even training the poll-workers. This “voting machine” was in fact a computer with a touch screen running Windows. To make maters worse: inside each computer was a GPRS wireless modem that sent the election results to Sdu, which in turn told the city. I had not been blind to the problems of electronic voting before, but now I was having my face rubbed in it, and it hurt.
Perhaps I should quickly introduce myself. My name is Rop Gonggrijp and I’m a dutch national that lives in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Some of you will know me as I have been mentioned in this magazine as well as been a regular guest on Off the Hook for almost as long as the show exists. I’m one of the main organizers for these Dutch hacker events. Between 1989 and 1993 I published Hack-Tic, a magazine not unlike 2600 except that it was written in Dutch. During the late Hack- Tic years I co-founded XS4ALL, which still is one of the larger ISPs in The Netherlands.
I guess I became part of the hacker community sometime during the early 1980s while playing with my fathers 300 baud acoustic modem, although arguably I was hacking before when I was soldering FM- transmitters together with a friend at age 12. But after reading Steven Levy’s book ‘Hackers, heroes of the computer revolution’, I knew what I was and that I was to be part of a global community, even if I could only knew a few other hackers around me.
… read the full article at Wired