• Saturday, April 12, 2025

INDIA

Election panel officials allay fears about Indian EVMs, as Tulsi Gabbard backs paper ballots for US

United States National Intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard claimed they have evidence of vulnerabilities to the hacking of electronic voting systems

Officials check Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs), Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) and other election materials before leaving for their respective polling stations at a distribution center in Amritsar on May 31, 2024, on the eve of the seventh and final phase of voting in India’s general election. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP) (Photo by NARINDER NANU/AFP via Getty Images)

By: India Weekly

ELECTION COMMISSION sources on Friday (11) rejected suggestions that electronic voting machines (EVMs) used in the country are vulnerable to hacking, asserting that the machines work like simple calculators which are not connected to the internet or infrared.

United States director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has claimed that her office has obtained evidence of vulnerabilities to the hacking of electronic voting systems for manipulating votes and called for a nationwide switch to paper ballots.

In response, the sources pointed out that some countries use “electronic voting systems” which are a mix of multiple systems, machines and processes including various private networks including the Internet.

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They underlined that India uses electronic voting machines that work like “simple, correct and accurate calculators” and cannot be connected to either the internet, WiFi or infrared.

These machines have stood legal scrutiny by the Supreme Court and are invariably checked by the political parties at various stages, including the conduct of “mock polls” before actual polling starts.

More than five crore paper trail machine slips have been verified and matched while counting in front of political parties, they pointed out.

Tech mogul Elon Musk had last year called for the elimination of EVMs, citing the risk of being hacked by humans or artificial intelligence (AI).

The then chief election commissioner Rajiv Kumar had in January responded to Musk’s claim saying, “A global IT expert said EVMs can be hacked while our elections were going on. They (the US) don’t have EVMs, they have electronic voting mechanisms.

“The remarks created pandemonium here. The same expert later said that India takes a single day to finish counting while the US takes over a month. We just follow the narratives that are suiting,” Kumar remarked without naming Musk. (PTI)

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