http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/31/opinion/31SAT1.html
Published on Saturday,
January 31, 2004 by The New York Times
Editorial
How to Hack an Election
Concerned
citizens have been warning that new electronic voting technology being rolled
out nationwide can be used to steal elections. Now there is proof. When the
State of Maryland hired a computer security firm to test its new machines,
these paid hackers had little trouble casting multiple votes and taking over
the machines' vote-recording mechanisms. The Maryland study shows convincingly
that more security is needed for electronic voting, starting with
voter-verified paper trails.
When
Maryland decided to buy 16,000 AccuVote-TS voting
machines, there was considerable opposition. Critics charged that the new
touch-screen machines, which do not create a paper record of votes cast, were
vulnerable to vote theft. The state commissioned a staged attack on the
machines, in which computer-security experts would try to foil the safeguards
and interfere with an election.
They
were disturbingly successful. It was an "easy matter," they reported,
to reprogram the access cards used by voters and vote multiple times. They were
able to attach a keyboard to a voting terminal and change its vote count. And
by exploiting a software flaw and using a modem, they were able to change votes
from a remote location.
Critics
of new voting technology are often accused of being alarmist, but this
state-sponsored study contains vulnerabilities that seem almost too bad to be
true. Maryland's 16,000 machines all
have identical locks on two sensitive mechanisms, which can be opened by any
one of 32,000 keys. The security team had no trouble making duplicates of the
keys at local hardware stores, although that proved
unnecessary since one team member picked the lock in "approximately 10
seconds."
Diebold, the machines' manufacturer, rushed to
issue a self-congratulatory press release with the headline "Maryland
Security Study Validates Diebold Election Systems
Equipment for March Primary." The study's authors were shocked to see
their findings spun so positively. Their report said that if flaws they
identified were fixed, the machines could be used in Maryland's March 2
primary. But in the long run, they said, an extensive overhaul of the machines and
at least a limited paper trail are necessary.
The
Maryland study confirms concerns about electronic voting that are rapidly
accumulating from actual elections. In Boone County, Ind., last fall, in a
particularly colorful example of unreliability, an electronic system initially
recorded more than 144,000 votes in an election with fewer than 19,000
registered voters, County Clerk Lisa Garofolo said.
Given the growing body of evidence, it is clear that electronic voting machines
cannot be trusted until more safeguards are in place.
Copyright
2004 The New York Times Company
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