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Positive News was handed the guardianship
of Global Village News and Resources in summer of 2004. Although we would like
to continue to make the archives available to subscribers and readers we would
like to point out that stories published prior to issue 89 were not under our
editorial guidance and would like to make a distinction that these are not
necessarily a reflection of the current opinions of our editorial team.
Computer Scientist Challenge Safety Of
Electronic VotingUSA - The Virginia State Board of
Elections had a seemingly simple task before it: Certify an upgrade to
the state's electronic voting machines. But with a recent report by
Johns Hopkins University computer scientists warning that the system's
software could easily be hacked into and election results tampered with,
the once perfunctory vote now seemed to carry the weight of democracy
and the people's trust along with it.
An outside consultant assured the three-member panel recently that
the report was nonsense. "I hope you're right," Chairman Michael G.
Brown said, taking a leap of faith and approving Diebold Election
System's upgrades. "Because when they get ready to hang the three of us
in effigy, you won't be here."
Since being released two weeks ago, the Hopkins report has sent shock
waves across the country. Some states have backed away from purchasing
any kind of electronic voting machine, despite a new federal law that
has created a gold rush by allocating billions to buy the machines and
requiring all states, as well as the District of Columbia, to replace
antiquated voting equipment by 2006.
"The rush to buy equipment this year or next year just doesn't make
sense to us anymore," said Cory Fong, North Dakota's deputy secretary of
state. Maryland officials, who signed a $55.6 million agreement with
Diebold for 11,000 touch-screen voting machines just days before the
Hopkins report came out, have asked an international computer security
firm to review the system's security. If they don't like what they find,
officials have said, the sale will be off.
The report has brought square into the mainstream an obscure but
increasingly nasty debate between about 900 computer scientists, who
warn that these machines are untrustworthy, and state and local election
officials and machine manufacturers, who insist that they are reliable.
"The computer scientists are saying, 'The machinery you vote on is
inaccurate and could be threatened; therefore, don't go. Your vote
doesn't mean anything,' " said Penelope Bonsall, director of the Office
of Election Administration at the Federal Election Commission. "That
negative perception takes years to turn around."
Still, even some advocates of the new system are thinking twice. The
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, which pushed for electronic
machines to help visually impaired and disabled voters, says the Hopkins
report has given them pause. They're calling on President Bush and
members of Congress to convene a forum of experts to hash it out. "We
have become concerned about these questions of ballot security," said
Deputy Director Nancy Zirkin.
Her group and others supported passage of the $3.9 billion Help
America Vote Act in November. Of the $1.5 billion appropriated so far to
replace old machines, rewrite outdated equipment standards, encourage
research to improve technology, train poll workers and update
registration lists, about half has been released. And that has all gone
toward buying electronic machines, which cost as much as $4,000 a piece.
"These vendors are everywhere," said David Blount, spokesman for
Mississippi Secretary of State Eric Clark. "They're besieging everyone."
The remaining money is to be released once an Election Assistance
Commission is appointed. By law, the board was to have begun work in
February. But the names of the four commissioners, two from each major
party, have yet to go to the Senate for confirmation.
The stakes are high. The 2000 Florida presidential election showed
the shortcomings of the current system.
A subsequent Cal Tech/MIT report found that of more than 100 million
votes cast nationwide, as many as 6 million weren't counted because of
registration errors or problems with punch-card and lever machines. One
study found that of 800 lever machines tested, 200 had broken meters
that stopped counting once they hit 999.
Frustrations with the old machines -- levers were invented in the
1930s and punch cards in 1904 -- have turned many local election
officials into staunch supporters of the new electronic models.
Advocates for the disabled say that the machines will enable the
visually impaired, for the first time, to put on headphones and vote a
secret ballot.
Mischelle Townsend, registrar of voters in Riverside County, Calif.,
said the electronic machines have saved as much as $600,000 in paper
every election and, from 1996 to 2000, helped increase voter turnout to
72 percent, up 10 percent.
Any tampering would be caught, she said, in the extensive pre- and
post-election testing. The best defense of the machines, she said, is
that there has been no documented case of voter fraud. "If the computer
scientists had one valid point, one, then why hasn't one incident of
what they're saying occurred in all of these elections?"
But past is not prologue, historians and political scientists warn.
"Some of these hacking scenarios are highly improbable. But it's not
completely out of the question," said Larry J. Sabato, a political
scientist at the University of Virginia who has written about political
corruption. "When the stakes are high enough in an election, partisans
and others will do just about anything. So this is a worry."
Computer scientists note that computers are unreliable, subject to
bugs, glitches and hiccups as well as the more remote possibility of
outright hacking and code tampering.
They warn of a hostile programmer inserting what they call Trojan
horses, Easter eggs or back doors to predetermine the outcome. They
point to a number of errors in the 2002 elections, from poll workers --
like some in Montgomery County -- unfamiliar with how long it takes to
warm up the machines to mysterious vote tallies.
In Georgia, where Diebold machines are used, a handful of voters
found that when they pressed the screen to vote for one candidate, the
machine registered a vote for the opponent. Technicians were called in
and the problem was fixed, state officials have said.
In Alabama, a computer glitch caused a 7,000-vote error and clouded
the outcome of the gubernatorial race for two weeks. But more
critically, computer scientists charge that the software that runs the
machines is riddled with security flaws.
"Whoever certified that code as secure should be fired," said Avi
Rubin, technical director of the Information Security Institute at Johns
Hopkins and co-author of the report.
Rubin analyzed portions of Diebold software source code that was
mistakenly left on a public Internet site and concluded that a teenager
could manufacture "smart" cards and vote several times. Further, he
said, insiders could program the machine to alter election results
without detection. All machines had the same password hard-wired into
the code. And in some instances, it was set at 1111, a number laughably
easy to hack, Rubin said.
Because there is no paper or electronic auditing system in the machine,
there would be no way to reconstruct an actual vote, he said.
In a 27-page rebuttal, Diebold dismissed the findings. Officials said
that the software Rubin analyzed was old and that only a portion may
have been used in an actual election. "Right now, we're very, very
confident about the security of our system," said Mark Radke, a Diebold
executive. "If there is a way to make it more secure, we're open to that
from good, reliable, knowledgeable sources who don't have a previous
agenda."
That doesn't satisfy some critics. "The most important thing about
the Hopkins report is not the security holes they found, but irrefutable
proof that all this stuff that the machines are secure is hot air," said
David Dill, a computer scientist at Stanford University who has turned
the debate over electronic machines into a national crusade.
State and local election officials, however, say the checks and
balances -- the poll workers and judges, the thick manuals of procedures
-- ensure the sanctity of elections.
"It's not fair to do an evaluation that doesn't talk about context,"
said Mary Kiffmeyer, president of the National Association of
Secretaries of State. "Our voting process has all kinds of security.
It's not just the box of technology."
Although free and fair elections are a central tenet of America's
democracy, no one paid much attention to how they were executed for
years. Not until 1990 did federal elections officials decide to write
voluntary standards to certify voting machines.
Still, the atmosphere remained fairly clubby, with one lab doing the
testing and a revolving door between voting machine companies and the
state officials who later went to work for them. Although nearly 20
companies have had equipment certified by the FEC, only three are major
players: Diebold, with 55,000 touch screens throughout the country; ES&S
of Omaha; and Oakland, Calif.-based Sequoia Voting Systems. All machines
go through the FEC's testing and certification process, which can cost
companies anywhere from $25,000 to $100,000. Yet a 2001 report by the
General Accounting Office found that the FEC standards do not thoroughly
test for security or user friendliness and that only 37 states follow
them.
Doug Jones, a computer scientist in Iowa, said the testing is so
secret that even he, as an insider who serves on the state board that
certifies voting equipment, can't get information. Five years ago, he
found the identical security flaws cited in the Hopkins report.
"They promised it would be fixed," Jones said. "The Hopkins group
found clear evidence that it wasn't. Yet for five years, I had been
under the impression that it was fixed."
Diebold's Radke said the code has been fixed.
Even the most vocal critics say there are workable solutions. Computer
scientists say the companies should release their secret source codes
for expert review, as two start-ups, VoteHere and Populex, have agreed
to do. Or that states should require automatic upgrade clauses, as Santa
Clara County has.
Dill, the Stanford computer scientist, and others are pushing for
what are called voter-verified audit trails. By attaching a printer to
every machine, voters can review the electronic ballot before it drops
into a locked box.
Many solutions are already spelled out in the Help America Vote Act,
which mandates tougher security, usability and accuracy standards. In
the end, however, with experts still at loggerheads and the 2004
election looming, voters are left wondering which side to trust. Howard
A. Denis (R-Potomac-Bethesda), a Montgomery County Council member, was
so shaken by the Hopkins report that he is considering asking for a
waiver to stop using electronic machines.
"The more I look into this, the more serious I think it is," he said.
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A42085-2003Aug10.html
By Brigid Schulte
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, August 11, 2003; Page A01
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes.)
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