How to Hack an Election
Center for Information Technology Policy » Voting Study
The synopsis:
This paper presents a fully independent security study of a Diebold AccuVote-TS voting machine, including its hardware and software. We obtained the machine from a private party. Analysis of the machine, in light of real election procedures, shows that it is vulnerable to extremely serious attacks. For example, an attacker who gets physical access to a machine or its removable memory card for as little as one minute could install malicious code; malicious code on a machine could steal votes undetectably, modifying all records, logs, and counters to be consistent with the fraudulent vote count it creates. An attacker could also create malicious code that spreads automatically and silently from machine to machine during normal election activities — a voting-machine virus. We have constructed working demonstrations of these attacks in our lab. Mitigating these threats will require changes to the voting machine's hardware and software and the adoption of more rigorous election procedures.
" ... a voting machine virus." Given the money available to compromise individuals with physical access to voting machines, not to mention the True Believers who believe the ends justify the means, a compromised election result is an inevitablity. Since 2000 and 2004 have shown that national results can turn on a few key precincts, the outcome of elections using this equipment are to be questioned from this point on.
Posted on September 14, 2006 04:02 PM