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SC nixes
group’s petition to cite Comelec in contempt
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May 9, 2011
from
NAMFREL Election Monitor Vol.2, No.9
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The Supreme Court has affirmed the right
of the Comelec to impose security measures in allowing third-party
groups to conduct an independent review of the source code used in
the automation election system (AES) provided by Smartmatic-Total
Information Management Corp. during the country’s first-ever
nationwide computerized balloting in 2010.
Source code is the human-readable set of computer program
instructions used to specify the internal actions to be performed by
the SAES-1800 [Smartmatic Auditable Election System] machines and
REIS [Real-Time Information System] computers.
In an en banc resolution, dated April 12 but released only last
week, the high court rejected the petition filed by the Center for
Empowerment in Governance (CenPEG), a public policy center, to cite
the Comelec in contempt of court for requiring a set of conditions
for this private group to access and review the source code.
The high court said the source code remains the private intellectual
property of Smartmatic, so the Comelec had the right to impose
“reasonable” security restrictions in a post-election review by
CenPEG or any other interested nongovernment organization or
political party to prevent the code from being tampered with or
unduly appropriated or copied.
“The court denies the motion to cite respondent Commission on
Elections in contempt of court for lack of merit,” stated the
resolution.
Comelec had chosen Smartmatic-TIM’s AES technology through a public
bidding, in lieu of other proposed systems like the Open Election
System (OES), which was being pushed by newly appointed Comelec
Commissioner Augusto Lagman and other CenPEG-allied personalities
and partner-NGOs. OES provides for a mix of manual voting and
computerized canvassing as against the full computerization model of
Smartmatic- TIM’s AES.
The high court acknowledged in its decision the right of CenPEG and
other groups to conduct a review of the source code as provided
under Section 12 of Republic Act 9639, or the automated elections
law, and in keeping with the people’s constitutional right to
information on matters of public concern.
But in the same ruling, the court noted that even the Constitution
recognizes that the exercise of this right to information is
“subject to such limitations as may be provided by law.” In the case
of the source code used in the May 2010 elections, the Comelec
imposed the following eight conditions in allowing CenPEG to conduct
a review: |
1. |
Entities
interested in conducting a source code review must signify
their interest in writing for approval of the
Comelec; |
2. |
Entities approved
by Comelec shall sign a nondisclosure agreement before they
are allowed to conduct the
source code review; |
3. |
Entities which
will conduct the source code review shall submit to the
Comelec the methodologies they
propose to use; |
4. |
Comelec shall
provide a secure and enclosed location/facility for the
conduct of the source code review, and
all entries and exits into the facility shall be properly
recorded; |
5. |
A read-only copy
of the source code shall be provided on secured Comelec
workstations in the secured
location/facility; |
6. |
No copies of the
source code or any part thereof may be taken out from the
secured location/facility; |
7. |
No electronic
devices of any kind, including but not limited to laptops,
mobile phones, cameras, USB drives
and other storage devices shall be permitted inside the
secured location/facility; and |
8. |
Each entity
that conducts a source code review shall submit a report to
the Comelec after the review period. |
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It will be recalled that in a 7-page
decision passed in September 2010 (http://bit.ly/9ka5UG), the
Supreme Court has ordered the Comelec to reveal the source codes of
Smartmatic's automated system used in last year's May elections,
granting a petition for mandamus filed by CenPEG. The Comelec has
yet to comply with said ruling.
(Sources: PDI / ABS-CBN) |
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