Millennium Post

Even manufactur­ers can’t manipulate EVMS: EC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The EVMS are robust and tamper- proof and even the manufactur­ers cannot manipulate them at the time of production, the Election Commission said on Sunday, countering allegation­s that the machines are unreliable.

With the Opposition’s questions on the reliabilit­y of the electronic voting machines getting louder, the Commission has come out with a list of ‘frequently asked questions’ to put across its views in public domain. Recently, the Commission had issued two statements defending the machines. The FAQS are the third attempt by the poll watchdog to counter the doubts on the machines’ reliabilit­y.

One of the first questions the FAQ addresses is whether the machine can be hacked? No, asserts the Commission. The M1 (model one) of EVM was manufactur­ed till 2006 and had all necessary technical features it “non-hackable contrary to claims made by some activists”, it said.

The M2 model of EVMS produced after 2006 and up to 2012 incorporat­ed additional safety features. It can detect “malicious sequenced key presses”.

“Further, the ECI-EVMS are not computer controlled, are stand alone machines and not connected to the Internet or any other network. Hence, there is no chance of hacking by remote devices... also do not have any frequency receiver or decoder for data for wireless or any external hardware port for connec- tion to any other non-evm accessory or device. Hence no tampering is possible,” the poll panel said.

The Commission also rejected suggestion­s that the machines can be manipulate­d by the manufactur­er itself.

“Not possible,” it said. The EVMS have been manufactur­ed in different years since 2006 and sent to different states.

The manufactur­ers -- ECIL and BEL -- would not know several years ahead which candidate will contest from a particular constituen­cy and what will be the sequence of the candidates on the ballot unit,” it said.

It also asserted that no ‘trojan horse’ can be injected into the EVM in the field. In fact, the new M3 EVIN produced after 2013 have additional features like tamper detection and self diagnostic­s.

The tamper detection feature makes an EVM inoperativ­e the moment anyone tries to open the machine. The self diagnostic feature checks the EVM fully every time it is switched on. Any change in its hardware or software will be detected.

It said contrary to “misinforma­tion and as alleged by some”, India does not use any EVMS produced abroad.

The EVMS are produced indigenous­ly and the software programme code is written inhouse and not outsourced.

“The programme is converted into machine code and only then given to the chip manufactur­er abroad because we don’t have the capability of producing semi-conductor microchips within the country.

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