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View Full Version : Hack the vote? No problem




zimv20
Sep 14, 2006, 12:52 AM
salon (http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/09/13/diebold/)

(the princeton study (http://itpolicy.princeton.edu/voting/))


Diebold, the e-voting-machine maker, has long sworn its systems are secure. Not so, says a new Princeton study. Converting votes from one candidate to another is simple.

Having reported extensively on the security concerns that surround the use of electronic voting machines, I anxiously awaited the results of a new study of a Diebold touch-screen voting system, conducted by Princeton University. The Princeton computer scientists obtained the Diebold system with cooperation from VelvetRevolution, an umbrella organization of more than 100 election integrity groups, which I co-founded a few months after the 2004 election. We acquired the Diebold system from an independent source and handed it over to university scientists so that, for the first time, they could analyze the hardware, software and firmware of the controversial voting system. Such an independent study had never been allowed by either Diebold or elections officials.

The results of that study, released this morning, are troubling, to say the least. They confirm many of the concerns often expressed by computer scientists and security experts, as well as election integrity activists, that electronic voting -- and indeed our elections -- may now be exceedingly vulnerable to the malicious whims of a single individual.

The study reveals that a computer virus can be implanted on an electronic voting machine that, in turn, could result in votes flipped for opposing candidates. According to the study, a vote for George Washington could be easily converted to a vote for Benedict Arnold, and neither the voter, nor the election officials administering the election, would ever know what happened. The virus could also be written to spread from one machine to the next and the malfeasance would likely never be discovered, the scientists said. The study was released along with a videotape demonstration.

"We've demonstrated that malicious code can spread like a virus from one voting machine to another, which means that a bad guy who can get access to a few machines -- or only one -- can infect one machine, which could infect another, stealing a few votes on each in order to steal an entire election," said the study's team leader, Edward W. Felten, professor of computer science and public affairs at Princeton.

The Princeton study is the first extensive investigation of the Diebold AccuVote DRE (Direct Recording Electronic) system, which is employed in Maryland, Florida, Georgia and many other states. Such touch-screen voting systems made by Diebold will be in use in nearly 40 states in this November's elections.

Felten and a small group of Princeton computer scientists implanted a nearly undetectable virus in a Diebold voting system. They managed to alter a voter's ballot -- after it had already been confirmed and cast -- and flip a vote to a candidate other than the one the voter had intended. As Felten explained, "We've also found how malicious code could also modify its own tracks [afterward] and remain virtually undetectable by elections officials. It wouldn't be found in the standard tests performed either before or after an election."

The Princeton report shows that a virus could be inserted onto a Diebold voting system by a single individual "with just one or two minutes of unsupervised access to either the voting machine or the memory card," which is used with the system to store ballot definitions and vote tabulations.

The question of unsupervised access to voting systems has long been at the core of the debate over the use and security of electronic voting machines. That debate reached a boiling point in California's June election, when programmed, election-ready Diebold voting machines were discovered to have been sent home overnight with poll workers on so-called sleepovers, in the days and weeks prior to the election, by San Diego County's registrar of voters. Poll workers in the county, and many others around the country, are given voting machines by elections directors to keep at home prior to the election. They are then deployed on election morning at polling sites. The vulnerabilities to hacking, however, in the newer electronic voting systems have made that practice a topic of great concern. Earlier this year the federal certification body for e-voting systems issued a memorandum requiring greater security for such systems.

As a result of the security breaches via the voting machine "sleepovers" in San Diego County, the special election between Francine Busby and Brian Bilbray for the House seat of jailed Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham was contested by voting rights advocates. The legal suit charged that unrestricted access to the machines by poll workers compromised the election and violated both state and federal law.

David Jefferson, a lead voting systems technology advisor for the California secretary of state and a computer scientist at Livermore National Laboratory, told "The PBS News Hour" just after California's primary election, "You can affect multiple machines from a single attack; that's what makes it so dangerous."

Jefferson's comment was based on a report by independent computer scientist Harri Hursti and the firm Security Innovation after a recent test of the systems in Emery County, Utah. Last March, the experts gained access to a Diebold touch-screen system in the county. Their report revealed that a "feature" built into Diebold's touch-screen system could allow an individual to overwrite the election software, operating system and computer firmware with just a minute or two of unsupervised access to the machines -- no password necessary.

Electronic voting systems such as those made by Diebold and a handful of other private corporations now dot the nation's electoral landscape. While virtually all of the systems currently set for use this November have been found to be vulnerable to hacking, tampering, inaccuracy and error, various elements of the Diebold voting systems have found their way into more independent hands-on investigations. A recent landmark report issued by New York University's Brennan Center for Justice detailed some 120 threats to e-voting security across all such systems.

The computer scientists and security experts who issued the Emery County report have not been alone in pointing out vulnerabilities in the Diebold touch-screen system. Johns Hopkins computer scientist and elections-security expert Aviel Rubin was one of the original voices to declare the dangers of Diebold's systems. He analyzed source code from its voting machines that was left, by the company, unsecured on a public Internet site. He recently told Newsweek: "If Diebold had set out to build a system as insecure as they possibly could, this would be it."

Diebold has repeatedly disputed the findings then as speculation. But the Princeton study appears to demonstrate conclusively that a single malicious person could insert a virus into a machine and flip votes. The study also reveals a number of other vulnerabilities, including that voter access cards used on Diebold systems could be created inexpensively on a personal laptop computer, allowing people to vote as many times as they wish.

Diebold spokesman David Bear did not return Salon's calls for comment on the Princeton study. In the past, he has denied that such security concerns are notable.

(more)


"I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president." -- Diebold CEO Walden O'Dell, in a fall 2003 fundraising letter sent to Republicans

link (http://www.boingboing.net/2004/11/03/quote_of_the_day_die.html)

this is how democracy dies.



KingYaba
Sep 14, 2006, 01:07 AM
The pen is hacker proof. :cool:

FFTT
Sep 14, 2006, 01:25 AM
This week's Maryland primaries were disrupted when the Smart authorization cards
were not delivered on time to numerous poll locations.

Voters were turned away because the machines could not be used without the Smart Cards.

Voters were permitted to use provisional paper ballots, but for some reason
polls ran out of the Democratic provisional ballots.

Several poll judges never showed up and some poll employees simply quit.

The training is completely inadequate and few truly qualified people are willing
to work for what is being paid.

Many poll workers have little if any computer or technical skills,so if something does go wrong, no one votes.

This is inexcusable so close to such an important congressional election.

zimv20
Sep 14, 2006, 01:44 AM
This is inexcusable so close to such an important congressional election.
it goes beyond that, though. what happens when the results of all national elections are called into doubt? what happens when the voting public loses all confidence in the election process?

Ugg
Sep 14, 2006, 02:25 AM
it goes beyond that, though. what happens when the results of all national elections are called into doubt? what happens when the voting public loses all confidence in the election process?

A revolution?

zimv20
Sep 14, 2006, 02:31 AM
A revolution?
if we're lucky. i fear mass apathy and de facto dictatorial powers by the ruling party. if the GOP controls the elections and the courts, then they control everything.

CorvusCamenarum
Sep 14, 2006, 02:34 AM
it goes beyond that, though. what happens when the results of all national elections are called into doubt? what happens when the voting public loses all confidence in the election process?

I wonder what would happen if the nation in its entirety boycotted an election. The cynic in me says something like that is exactly what those in power would like so they can have a "legal" excuse to stay put and continue screwing us over.

As we learned in Florida, paper ballots apparently aren't foolproof either.

As long as there's more profit and/or power to be gained from propping up a broken system than in finding an actual solution, nothing will get done.

I lost faith in our government to do anything remotely useful a long time ago.

it5five
Sep 14, 2006, 02:52 AM
The pen is hacker proof. :cool:

Which is exactly why I will absolutely refuse to cast my vote on a computer in November.

FFTT
Sep 14, 2006, 03:22 AM
One lady had to write down her choices on a scrap piece of paper because her voting location was completely out of provisional paper ballots.
Democratic provisional ballots.

Sadly a disturbing number of people still do not care ENOUGH to make a major
fuss if this election gets thrown.

This is a major power struggle.

The Bush administration knows damn well if the neocons are removed from power that they face investigation, exposure and impeachment at the demand of a Democratic majority.

They're talking jail time and they know it.

They will use every dirty trick in the book and spend every cent in their war chest
to avoid prosecution.

Dont Hurt Me
Sep 14, 2006, 07:32 AM
Every voter should demand a paper ballot period, that ends all lies,spin,mistrust etc. Plus it takes awhile to count ending the practice of predicting winners with 5% of the votes counted. Eliminate electronic voting and stop voting fraud. Those in Power though dont seem interested in that.

Thomas Veil
Sep 14, 2006, 10:22 AM
In the primary we had in Ohio earlier this year, Cuyahoga County (which contains Cleveland and most of its surrounding suburbs) was in chaos. Problems with electronic machines all over the place.

Other counties in Ohio did not have such problems, so I cannot conclude that there was a systemic attempt to defeat the system. But...a review of Cuyahoga County's problems later revealed that there was a discrepancy between the electronic vote and the paper trail in something like 75% of the electronic voting machines.

KingYaba
Sep 14, 2006, 02:49 PM
I believe we should stick with paper ballots. It will take more time to count, but at least there aren't as many chances for fraud.

mischief
Sep 14, 2006, 04:14 PM
I believe we should stick with paper ballots. It will take more time to count, but at least there aren't as many chances for fraud.

My wife and I switched to the mail-in ballots to avoid all of this. Personally I'd love to see e-balloting work but the only systems secure enough at the moment are ATMs, which would scare more folks than the deibold machines.... even though they'd be pretty damn secure.

Desertrat
Sep 14, 2006, 05:12 PM
Jim March has been screaming about Diebold for, what, three years, now? More? Somebody here sneered about him the first time I mentioned him. So far, though, he's been demonstrably been proven correct...

Art

zimv20
Sep 14, 2006, 05:26 PM
bev harris has been on about irregularities since bush/gore, if not before.

Ugg
Sep 14, 2006, 09:00 PM
My wife and I switched to the mail-in ballots to avoid all of this.

Same here, and I think that all voting should be done this way. Didnīt Oregon start this a couple of years ago?

Desertrat
Sep 15, 2006, 12:12 AM
Yeah, zim; Jim has worked with Bev Harris on occasion. He gives her great credit for her efforts.

'Rat

solvs
Sep 15, 2006, 06:38 AM
what happens when the voting public loses all confidence in the election process?
When? I used to think this was all tin foil hat stuff, but then I saw it first hand living in WA state. There were a lot of discrepancies in the gubernatorial results, so they did a recount, and the (R) won by a lot less than was originally reported. So they did a hand recount, and it turns out the (D) candidate actually won. I still wonder how many of those people had voted for Kerry, and if that could happen in a liberal state, what about the others that were more up in the air.

For the record, Howard Dean showed how easily this could be done (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=howard+dean+shows+how+easy+it+is+to+change+voting+diebold&btnG=Google+Search) a couple of years ago.