http://www.newsday.com/technology/business/wire/sns-ap-internet-voting,0,5953997.story
Electronic Voting
Security Firm Hacked
By
TED BRIDIS, AP Technology Writer
December
29, 2003
WASHINGTON
-- A company developing security technology for electronic voting suffered an
embarrassing hacker break-in that executives think was tied to the rancorous
debate over the safety of casting ballots online.
VoteHere Inc. of Bellevue, Wash., confirmed
Monday that U.S. authorities are investigating a break-in of its computers
months ago, when someone roamed its internal computer network. The intruder
accessed internal documents and may have copied sensitive software blueprints
that the company planned eventually to disclose publicly.
Chief
executive Jim Adler said VoteHere was confident it
knew the identity of its hacker and had already turned over "megabytes of
evidence" to the FBI and Secret Service. It also repaired the hole in its
computer network the intruder used to gain entry in October over the Internet,
he said.
U.S.
authorities confirmed the investigation but declined to comment further.
Adler
would not identify the company's chief suspect but said he thinks the person
was linked to the debate over the security of electronic voting. The same
individual may be tied to the theft in March of internal documents from Diebold Election Systems of Canton, Ohio.
"We
caught the intruder, identified him by name. We know where he lives,"
Adler said. "We think this is political. There have been break-ins around
election companies over the last several months, and we think this is
related."
VoteHere, which is privately held, disclosed the
federal investigation to stress that the break-in did not affect the integrity
of its voting technology, Adler said. The company also wanted to pre-empt any criticisms of electronic voting based on public
disclosures of its internal records.
"I
have no problem debating the merits of electronic voting with anyone, but
breaking and entering is not an appropriate forum for technology debate,"
Adler said.
Adler
said the intruder accessed internal corporate documents and may have copied
sensitive "source code," blueprints for software. But Adler said VoteHere planned eventually to reveal that source code,
which is protected under patents, for review by outside security researchers.
"Given
the political sensitivity to this issue, we felt it was important to get out on
this," Adler said.
Copyright
2003, The Associated Press
Copyright
Newsday, Inc.
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