Dominion Voting's No. 2 on Deloitte's list of Canada's top 50 rapid-growth tech firms

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Joyce McCloy

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Nov 2, 2009, 12:06:59 PM11/2/09
to Election Integrity
Dominion Voting's No. 2 on Deloitte's list of Canada's top 50 rapid-
growth tech firms

Mon Nov 2 2009

Electrical engineer and entrepreneur John Poulos displays technology
Dominion Voting Systems Corp. developed in Toronto that will be used
in the 2010 Philippines national elections. "They're trying to improve
their accuracy and provide a level of transparency that our machines
afford them."

RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR
It's a cliché on the Left that democracy is big business, that this
particularly complicated political system is ripe with opportunities
for boundless profiteering.

For John Poulos, whose firm sells equipment that helps governments run
technologically advanced elections, it's not quite that simple – the
link between a cast vote and a quick buck not quite that seamless.

"It's a struggle," he says.

Customers are budget-conscious and hesitant to change, Poulos
explains, often using technology bought 50 or more years ago.

Yet, in the past five years, his Toronto-based firm has posted a
remarkable growth rate of 10,356 per cent. This is a rather grand way
of saying Dominion Voting Systems Corp. grew from four men and an idea
to about 95 employees and a customizable product – enough to earn
Dominion Voting No. 2 spot on Deloitte's 2009 list of the 50 fastest-
growing Canadian tech firms.

It does not trade publicly and, on election days, those who cast
ballots may not think twice about the machine tabulating their votes.

But if you recently cast a municipal vote in Oakville, Pickering or
Montreal, or a provincial vote in September 's St. Paul's by-election
– or were among the many in the state of New York who voted for
senator Barack Obama for U.S. president – you may have used the
handiwork of this relatively small Canadian company.

Those who remember Florida's "hanging chad" fiasco of 2000 and its
stain on American democracy know just how important the technology
behind elections really is. The pace of technological change among
potential clients is practically glacial, but Dominion has thrived. It
has few rivals but has run test trials in the U.K. and Colombia and is
contributing voting technology to the Philippines' 2010 national
election.

Poulos started Dominion Voting in 2002, after the disaster in Florida.
Tens of thousands of incorrectly punched ballots were discounted,
leading to accusations of fraud in the tight race between George W.
Bush and Democrat Al Gore. "There was ... quite a bit of money spent a
few years ago" on electronic voting machines, touted as more reliable,
says Richard Niemi, a professor at the University of Rochester who
researches voting machines and ballot design.

In New York state, Dominion's technology is replacing 50-year-old, 363-
kilogram clunkers

Dominion's system mixes electronics and paper, combining an analog
paper trail of each person's vote with the advantages of quick,
digital tallying. Its optical scanning technology is widely respected
but American clients, at least post-Florida, looked on Dominion's use
of paper as quaint. "That was not seen as sexy," Poulos says.

What happened in a Sarasota County election in 2006 swung opinion the
other way: an electronic undercount effectively denied 18,000 citizens
their right to vote.

"That's a huge travesty of democracy," says Renan Levine, a political
scientist at the University of Toronto, noting purely digital voting
machines can be wiped clean. "If you've got a crash in the middle of
the day, what are you going to do? Call those people back to vote?"

It reminded everyone that a paper trail is a good backup.

"The general feeling now is that people want paper," Niemi says.

Vote-fixing is extremely difficult on Dominion's machines, Poulos
adds, because tampered-with computer hard drives will not send votes
to the central tally.

Most importantly under Dominion's current strategy, technological
developments have ensured that those with disabilities can cast secure
votes, without help.

Sitting in his sun-drenched office on Spadina Ave., the electrical
engineer with an MBA, turned entrepreneur, says, . . "We are
profitable. People know where to find us."



He prefers to speak about democracy as it exists in the world. Mail
votes in Oregon. Electronic voting in India and Brazil. Paper ballots
counted by hand in Canada's national elections. Where electorates
could tear down capitals if fraud is suspected, voting technology can
act to legitimize sometimes shaky democracy.

"Perception is everything," Poulos adds. "People can just say, `That
machine is broken. I don't trust it'."

He says his machines are open to multi-party scrutiny. That serves
democracy.

Dominion's ballot-box scanning technology will be deployed across the
Philippines. "They're trying to improve their accuracy and provide a
level of transparency that our machines afford them," he explains.
"Maybe, in the second or third election," Manila will add Dominion's
accessibility technology so all can cast a ballot independently.

Maybe, indeed.

http://www.thestar.com/business/article/719544--selling-trust-in-democracy
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