Of late Brillantes nervously has been claiming that all’s set for Election Day — all except, well, for the all-important PCOS “source code.†The source code is the set of human-readable commands that will enable the PCOS to recognize genuine ballots, count the votes, and transmit the tallies. Not only does the law require the Comelec to show it to political parties and computer experts at least six months before Election Day. It is also a must for credibility of the results. But here Brillantes is, barely three weeks from the May 13 balloting, still with no source code in hand.
At this point, Brillantes already is in breach of the automation law. PCOS supplier Smartmatic of Venezuela, meanwhile, is in breach of its P9-billion contract with the Comelec. No source code is forthcoming, for Smartmatic does not have it either. The real software owner is Dominion of Canada, which merely licensed Smartmatic in 2009 to lease it to the Comelec for P7.2 billion in the 2010 presidential election. Back then, although required by law and contract, Smartmatic also didn’t submit any source code. This became known only in 2012, when Smartmatic and Dominion sued each other in the US over, among others, profits from the plum Comelec deal. By then Brillantes already had bought, for another P1.8 billion, 82,000 erstwhile leased PCOS units. Brillantes couldn’t take to task his Comelec predecessors of 2010 for signing up the Venezuelan impostor, for he too is already in too deep with it. The automation law states that whoever the voting machine supplier is should also be the software owner-developer. Past and present Comelec bosses ignored the proviso.
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