Despite several reported e-voting glitches, the citizens have spoken. The GOP-run House of Representatives is history. But the Senate is still too close to call--and e-voting could be an issue if the votes are recounted.
We previously rated each member of the U.S. Congress on how tech-friendly they are. But did our scorecard winners and losers get re-elected?
November 8, 2006
Minority party now can claim an enviable majority in the House of Representatives, but control of Senate not yet settled.
November 8, 2006
Bloggers, both blue and red, made all sorts of predictions about the future Congress. Who was right and who was wrong?
November 8, 2006
Plenty of problems with electronic voting machines are reported, ranging from trivial to worrisome.
November 7, 2006
From Colorado to Florida, electronic voting machines--and human error--are blamed for glitches that caused plenty of irritation.
November 7, 2006
Is there a TiVo effect when it comes to campaign spots? For those who've had enough of mudslinging, there is.
November 6, 2006
special report CNET News.com ranks every member of the U.S. Congress based on their technology-related votes. Some aren't happy about their score.
November 2, 2006
blog Network's "Hacking Democracy" documentary seeks to shed some light on perceived vulnerabilities in computer software used in electronic voting machines.
November 2, 2006
Fears of glitches and foul play on computerized machines have prompted widespread calls for paper receipts.
October 31, 2006
blog Chicago Tribune reports that hackers broke into the Web site for the Election Commission in DuPage County, Ill., and made some not-so-nice modifications to the list of voter qualifications.
October 30, 2006
A News.com survey of 1,000 campaign Web sites finds Libertarian Party candidates follow Web standards most closely.
October 26, 2006
A husband-wife team running in the state's governor's race blame a hacker for infecting their election Web site with a virus.
October 26, 2006
blog There are ways to get a better picture of the races in your particular district than to read the paper pamphlet.
October 26, 2006
From a Democrat whose dog pens his Web site to Republicans with blogs but no entries, here's the best of the worst campaign Web sites.
October 25, 2006
blog The lawmaker, Cheryl Kagan, has been an outspoken critic of Diebold's controversial voting machines.
October 23, 2006
Congressional campaign information meets Google Earth for a mashup made in voter resource heaven.
October 22, 2006
blog The site, dubbed The Stump, features blogs on key political races and issues of the 2006 mid-term elections.
October 17, 2006
blog There are numerous Web sites to help you keep track of what's getting decided where.
October 16, 2006
Experts gather at MIT conference to discuss the many obstacles blocking the adoption of voting technology.
October 6, 2006
Mark Foley, who resigned from Congress over sex-chat allegations, touted himself as its leading defender of children on the Net.
October 3, 2006
Company says it wants to strengthen political influence on decisions Washington makes regarding the Internet.
September 18, 2006
Princeton analysis says Diebold's AccuVote-TS isn't secure, while legal action over e-vote supervision continues.
September 14, 2006
Democratic rival to California's governor admits aides nabbed a controversial audio file. But his camp calls it fair game.
September 12, 2006
In taking down the incumbent senator, Ned Lamont relied heavily on Net. A sign of campaigns to come?
campaign.
August 9, 2006
Almost one-third of the nation's registered voters will use new voting equipment in November 2006. Source: Election Data Services
About 56 percent of counties (49 percent of the nation's registered
voters) will use optical scan voting equipment; 36 percent of counties, (38 percent of the nation's registered voters) will use electronic equipment. Source:
About 40 percent of registered voters are expected to cast ballots on paperless touch-screen machines, which has led to concerns that the lack of a paper trail leaves no way to verify votes. Lawsuits to prohibit the use of such machines have been filed in Colorado, Arizona, California, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Source: The New York Times
Facebook.com recently created 1,400 candidate profiles that listed names, states, parties and offices. Source: USA Today
Almost 17 percent of candidates for federal election with Web sites include the text "blog" somewhere on their home page. Source: CNET News.com
As voters pass judgment, many confront technical bugs
The New York Times
California e-voting machines let you vote early and often
Techdirt
Politicians beware--Internet prolongs blunders
Reuters
A new campaign tactic: Manipulating Google data
The New York Times (registration required)
How to steal an election by hacking the vote
Ars Technica
Schwarzenegger camp mines consumer data to target supporters
Associated Press
Assemblywoman's campaign goes paperless
The Oakland Tribune
New questions over electronic voting
Associated Press
Building a better voting machine
Wired News
Politicians' campaigns invade MySpace
USA Today
Foley scandal is hurting GOP's image, poll finds
The New York Times (registration required)