Message: 19
Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2012 09:40:09 -0800
From: Yosem Companys <[email protected]>
To: Liberation Technologies <[email protected]>
Subject: [liberationtech] Killer fail: how Romney's broken Orca app
    cost him thousands of votes | The Verge

There's been a tidal wave of schadenfreude over Romney's fail-whale ORCA voting 
system that crashed on election day and caused frustration for numerous 
volunteers, one of whom has had a highly-quoted blog on the subject (Eckdahl).

And when techies see the name "Microsoft" in the mix, they rush to judge that 
closed software was the problem, or that ignorance and lack of "science" was 
the problem because it was Romney. 

But in fact, Zac Moffat used Drupal on his websites, an open source program, 
and he used other open sourced programs. And while located in Alexandria, VA, 
the firm that seems to have done the work for the campaign, the company where 
Moffat used to work, Targeted Victory, had all kinds of talent in it that is on 
the Silicon Valley networks -- in fact, one developer was Al Gore's developer.

So I ask a lot of questions that go beyond the snark about Microsoft, Romney, 
etc. Why did they have Al Gore's dev on this job? Was his heart really in the 
job? Were the other Obama voters really working all night for Romney? And 
really, who *did* code this mess, and how on earth could they not have 
field-tested it before the day of show? 

That suggests so much incompetence as to make it legitimate to ask if there was 
sabotage -- there have been so many nasty and vicious fights in this campaign, 
it's ok to ask that. Sabotage doesn't mean a conspiracy and plans. Sabotage can 
mean casual neglect and kicking over the server before you go out to vote for 
Obama.

As for the question of whether using open source software on a mission-critical 
large job like this, well, understandable an opposition campaign against an 
incumbent may feel as if they didn't need to have all of Obama-supporting 
geekdom in on the job -- although they seem to have had some anyway.

Ars Technica has had some of the best reporting on this, but Sean refuses 
Gallagher to name Targeted Victory, saying there was "an unnamed" firm involved 
-- because he says he doesn't have admission from them. But their website 
acknowledges they had the Romney campaign as a client, and Zac Moffat used to 
work there and always linked them in his interviews. 

The Microsoft piece of it isn't clear yet; there's also a Googler on it, and 
while originally reported as TechCrunch as a 20% er, this was corrected to say 
that the Googler worked on the campaign in his own time -- was this on the 
issue of scaling?

Romney could buy the best help he needed on this campaign. The question is: can 
you buy tech help that is supportive of the Republican campaign or at least 
neutral and professional enough to do their job properly? I think the answer 
is: no. The results tell us that.

And while everyone on this list is gloating that they are even more in power 
now, my question is whether some of you will at last become dissidents, as you 
should -- with even your beloved in power -- if you really have the values you 
claim of "openness" and "independence" and "freedom".

Catherine A. Fitzpatrick
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