From: A
Date: Thu, 05 Jan 2006 21:09:00 -0800
Subject: Re: PROBLEM OF ELECTION RIGGING NOT TAKEN SERIOUSLY ENOUGH
>
> News & Politics > Voting 2.0
> Voting 2.0
> Will Your E-Vote Count?
> By Cheryl Gerber | Illustrations By Dash Shaw
> Imagine this: A Trojan Horse unleashes thousands of illegitimate
votes and disappears without a trace, election commissioners bypass
laws, uninvestigated computer glitches and easily picked locks in
voting systems, no federal oversight holding e-voting vendors
accountable—yes folks, elections can be stolen.
>
> Since the 2000 Presidential election, problems stemming from the use
of electronic voting machines have called into question the foundation
of American democracy—the US voting system. At the forefront of
concerns are security issues surrounding the use of Direct Recording
Electronics [DREs], better known as touch screen computer voting
machines, and their lack of a paper trail in the form of an auditable
paper ballot. Widely reported irregularities from voting districts
around the US have alarmed many and opened claims of stolen elections.
Some even doubt the legitimacy of the outcome of recent US elections.
A team of top computer scientists has been working diligently to
resolve the many underlying design problems in the e-voting system
that leave it open to cheating. Stalled by the federal government, and
with doubts about e-voting continuing to spread, these scientists have
instead turned to state governments and the National Science
Foundation for help.
>
> "Maryland, where I live, uses Diebold DREs, which are an ideal
opportunity for cheating," said Dr. Avi Rubin, Technical Director,
Information Security Institute, Johns Hopkins University. "In fact,
you couldn't come up with a better opportunity for cheating. There's
no ability to audit or recount, and the entire process takes place
inside the computer, which is not transparent."
>
> In May 2004, Rubin co-authored an analysis of electronic voting
systems, raising concerns about lack of security, for the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the world's largest
professional organization for technical standards. He also served in
2004 as a poll worker and election judge in Baltimore County,
Maryland, where he lives. These and other experiences have only served
to raise his concerns about the possibility for cheating via the use
of electronic voting machines.
> Efforts to Secure E-voting Stalled
>
> Apprehension about the lack of security in Diebold's DREs and other
touch screen computer voting machines spurred David Dill, a Stanford
University computer science professor, to establish the Verified
Voting Foundation in November 2004. According to Dill, when federal
legislators tried to create a law that would address e-voting security
problems, it was "blocked by a committee chairman, so we focused on
state legislation."
>
> Since then, the group has been advising states on e-voting security
problems and the need, at a bare minimum, for a verified voting paper
audit trail.
>
> Earlier this year, Congressman Rush Holt (D-NJ) submitted a bill,
The Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act of 2005 (HR 550),
to the House Administration Committee. The bill requires a paper audit
trail at the federal level. But Holt has not been able to get the
chairman of the committee, Congressman Robert Ney (R-OH), to schedule
a hearing on it all year long.
>
> "Congressman Ney will not schedule a hearing on the bill, so it
remains in limbo," confirmed Pat Eddington, Holt's press secretary.
>
> Even the bi-partisan federal Carter-Baker Commission Report could
not nudge Ney. Set up to review the entire electoral process and
co-chaired by former president Jimmy Carter and former Secretary of
State James Baker, the report strongly endorses the need for a paper
audit trail. (Congressman Ney's office did not return repeated calls.)
>
> In lieu of the refusal of some at the federal level of government to
address the issues surrounding the legitimacy of electronic voting
procedures and work toward safeguarding American elections, Verified
Voting turned to state governments. Since its founding, Verified
Voting has helped 26 states establish state legislation that requires
a paper audit trail in e-voting machines, and 14 states have
requirements pending, according to verifiedvoting.org.
>
> However, paper receipts only begin to address the complexity of
electronic voting problems. The most serious concern among computer
scientists studying the problems is the "Trojan Horse," a computer
code that can be programmed to hide inside voting software, emerge in
less than one second to change an election, then destroy itself
immediately afterwards, going undetected.
>
> "Anyone who has access to the software—an insider—could easily
insert a Trojan Horse into the software," said Barbara Simons, a past
president of the Association for Computing Machinery and a retired IBM
researcher who is co-authoring a book on the risks of computerized
voting. The problem is that the Trojan Horse cannot be detected unless
the software is inspected continuously—as in every second—for its
presence.
> No Oversight of E-voting Legitimacy
>
> Three-voting vendors—Diebold, Election Systems and Software (ESS),
and Sequoia—dominate the market. Since e-voting is unprecedented in
the history of elections and law tends to lag behind technology
development, there is no federal oversight body holding these
companies accountable for the security and reliability of their
electronic voting systems. Their machines are supposedly tested by
independent testing authorities. "But it turns out that the vendors
pay the independent testing authorities and the vendors keep the
results confidential," said Simons. "So you have a huge conflict of
interest right there."
>
> In addition, said Simons, "There is no requirement to make any
problems public or even to reveal them to election officials because
this information is proprietary for the vendors. Also, the testers are
only required to test for things on a list and aren't required to test
for things that aren't on the list. If you are going to subvert
software, you are not going to do something that will be found by a
checklist. So it's easy to insert a Trojan Horse into the software
because the testing won't find it. And even if they did find it, there
are no requirements to report it." Vendors are the ones who decide
what goes on the list and what doesn't.
>
> The privatization of the US voting process means the public lacks
access to, or the ability to inspect, election software, as well as
information about or even the names of the computer programmers who
created it. Private companies and e-voting vendors flatly state that
their election systems must be kept confidential as exclusive property
right products, and therefore refuse to release their software source
code for inspection by independent third parties. They claim that to
do so would violate their right to copyright secrecy and would open
the door to rivals who could steal their products. But some wonder
what else vendors might be trying to hide. For instance, according to
information reported on www.blackboxvoting.org, a non-partisan,
nonprofit consumer protection group that is conducting fraud audits
on the 2004 elections, Diebold, one of the e-voting vendors, hired
ex-felons, who were convicted in Canada of computer fraud, to program
election systems software.
>
> "I don't want to malign ex-felons," said Simons, "but you want to
know the names of the people who are programming the machines that
will be recording and counting our votes." On the other hand, it is
not uncommon for major companies to hire, as programmers, former
hackers who have proven themselves to be advanced enough to hack into
even the most sophisticated and safeguarded systems. In some cases, to
successfully gain entry into an ultra-secured system can guarantee a
hacker a job.
>
> E-voting machine companies like Diebold are, in essence, funded to
the tune of $3.9 billion by a 2002 federal law, entitled the Help
America Vote Act (HAVA) which appropriates these funds as only an
initial amount to the states to purchase e-voting for all national
elections. States are required to phase out punch-card ballots and
other systems that seemingly were problematic in the 2002 presidential
election in Florida and to standardize on electronic voting systems
for national elections by January 1, 2006. The problem is that this
does not give the states enough time to deal with the complexity of
electronic voting systems. And HAVA does not require e-voting
companies to provide the kind of good security in those systems that
would prevent chances of cheating.
>
> Concerns about the many anomalies in the November 2004 election and |