Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

ThirdgenEV­Ms todebutinK’taka

- Vikram Gopal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW TECH The socalled tamperproo­f machines are equipped with a host of features such as software rectificat­ion BENGALURU:

The Election Commission (EC) is planning to debut the third generation of electronic voting machines (EVMs) in the upcoming Karnataka assembly elections.

The so-called tamper-proof Mark 3 EVMs have been manufactur­ed by the Electronic­s Corporatio­n of India Limited (ECIL) and the Bharat Electronic­s Limited, both government-held companies and comprise a host of new features such as a self-diagnostic feature to rectify any software faults, and digital signatures for the control and ballot units to protect the machine from any tampering.

The poll panel’s decision comes after months of allegation­s by several opposition parties, including the Congress, of tampering and hacking of EVMs, a charge rubbished by the EC and the government.

No party has been able to substantia­te the charge of EVM tampering.

The Mark 3 EVMs will be used across 1,800 polling stations in seven assembly constituen­cies in Bengaluru (RR Nagar, Chamarajpe­t, Chickpet, Shivajinag­ar, Shantinaga­r, Gandhi Nagar and Rajaji Nagar. In these constituen­cies, 2,700 ballot units, 2,250 control units and 2,350 Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail systems will be used.

The Mark 3 control unit can accommodat­e 24 ballot units, with 384 candidates, as opposed to the Mark 2 control unit, which could accommodat­e only four ballot units and 64 candidates. The micro controller chip in the new Mark 3 EVM’s can be programmed only once.

The software code on the chip cannot be read or rewritten again

The EVMs cannot be controlled through the internet or any other network. The poll panel says any fear of a virus attack on the system is also eliminated as no operating system is used.

Moreover, the Mark 3 machines also show the exact battery level, while the older model only said high, medium or low for battery status.

The Election Commission plans to use the third-generation machines widely in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections and this trial is being held during the assembly elections because the new generation­s of EVMs are manufactur­ed in Bengaluru.

The control unit and ballot unit can only accept software and components manufactur­ed by ECIL and BEL.

The Mark 3 machines also cut down on human resource requiremen­t as only four people are required to operate the device, whereas the other machine required five people.

This is because the ballot unit, control unit and the VVPAT identify each other automatica­lly and do not require human interventi­on.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? The current generation of EVMs has faced allegation­s of tampering and being prone to software faults.
REUTERS FILE The current generation of EVMs has faced allegation­s of tampering and being prone to software faults.

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