Princeton publishes how-to guide for hacking Sequoia e-voting machines

October 24th, 2008 by

Filed under:

Princeton publishes how-to guide for hacking Sequoia e-voting machines

If you’re American, it’s nearly time to do your civic duty and pick the lesser of two evils for the greater good… and then to wonder if that vote actually got counted. With Diebold admitting its own machines are utterly insecure, competitor Sequoia is now under the microscope and, after a little quality time with the company’s machines, Princeton researchers have filed a 158 page report on the ease of replacing their ROMs and winning yourself an election. Okay, we know what you’re thinking: “Hacking hardware isn’t exactly easy when the computer is in a locked box.” Amazingly, it is. A researcher was able to bypass the physical security mechanisms in 13 seconds, despite never having picked a lock before. Now you’re thinking: “But you’d need to do that on hundreds of them!” Not so; once infected that malicious code can spread itself to others, and, with no paper trail and an easily bypassed internal audit system, you’re well on your way to whatever dark corner of Washington, D.C. you care to occupy!

[Via Ars Technica]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Posted in security, hacking, voting, e-voting, princeton, sequoia | No Comments »

Diebold comes clean, admits that its e-voting machines are faulty

August 23rd, 2008 by

Filed under:

For years, Diebold has embarrassed itself by claiming that obvious faults were actually not faults at all, and during the past decade or so, it mastered the act of pointing the finger. Now that it has ironically renamed itself Premier Election Solutions, it’s finally coming clean. According to spokesman Chris Riggall, a “critical programming error that can cause votes to be dropped while being electronically transferred from memory cards to a central tallying point” has been part of the software for ten years. The flaw is on both optical scan and touchscreen machines, and while Mr. Riggall asserts that the logic error probably didn’t ruin any elections (speaking of logic error…), the outfit’s president has confessed to being “distressed” about the ordeal. More like “distressed” about the increasingly bleak future of his company.

[Via Techdirt]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Posted in issue, problem, vote, voting, cracked, hacked, hacker, e-voting, diebold, ohio, Premier, voting machine, VotingMachine | No Comments »

Unloved e-voting machines cluttering warehouses, losing value fast

August 21st, 2008 by

Filed under:

Just as the world’s landfills could soon see an influx of unwanted televisions, many American warehouses are packed with e-voting machines that once held promise for a better way to vote. Instead, they turned into a multi-year fiasco, with hackers figuring out how to do everything save for their income taxes on ‘em and states reverting back to less vulnerable methods. Now, many states are scrambling for ways to recoup costs, even for outlets that will take them in for recycling. Oddly, Ohio cannot ditch the systems it purchased until a couple of related lawsuits get dealt with. The result? Buckeyes will probably still be using e-voting machines come November.

[Via Slashdot, image courtesy of BradBlog]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Posted in hacking, vote, voting, elections, Government, cracked, hacked, usa, e-voting, electronic voting, ElectronicVoting, voting machines, VotingMachines | No Comments »

Sequoia takes aim at Princeton profs over e-voting analysis plans

March 19th, 2008 by

Filed under:

Princeton professors Ed Felten and Andrew Appel are certainly no strangers to drawing controversy, and it now looks like they’ve stirred the pot yet again, this time drawing the ire of Sequoia Voting Systems as a result of their plans to conduct some further e-voting analysis. At the heart of this latest brouhaha is plans that New Jersey election officials reportedly had to send some Sequoia Advantage e-voting machines to the profs for analysis, which Sequoia is unsurprisingly not so keen about. In fact, they’ve gone so far as to send Felten an email saying that such a plan violates Sequoia’s licensing agreement for use of the systems, and that they’ve “retained counsel to stop any infringement of our intellectual properties, including any non-compliant analysis.” No word on the professors’ future plans just yet but, given their past history, we suspect they won’t be backing down quite that easily.

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Posted in e-voting, princeton, andrew appel, AndrewAppel, ed felten, EdFelten, sequ, sequoia | No Comments »

Ohio report recommends scrapping electronic voting

December 17th, 2007 by

Filed under:

Like California and Florida before it, habitual swing state Ohio has just issued a report slamming its three providers of electronic voting equipment — including, of course, renamed Diebold — and recommending that the 50 counties which use them scrap the machines in favor of a paper-trail-leaving optical scanning method. The report, commissioned by Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, details the ways in which white hat hackers were able to infiltrate the systems, easily picking locks, using portable devices to manipulate vote counts, and even introducing “malignant software” into boards of election servers. Brunner’s plan calls for the entire state’s voting infrastructure to be overhauled by next year’s presidential elections, a move likely to be lauded by touchscreen voting’s many critics, but coming “about eight years too late, jerks — thanks a lot,” according to usually-even-tempered former candidate Al Gore.

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in voting, elections, e-voting, diebold, electronic voting, ElectronicVoting, ohio, touchscreen voting machines, TouchscreenVotingMachines | No Comments »

ES&S e-voting machine fails epically at withstanding hackers

December 7th, 2007 by

Filed under:

We’re going out on a limb here and assuming that precisely no one is surprised, but yes, another e-voting machine has proven totally incapable of resisting even the most unsophisticated of hacks. Not long after California Secretary of State Debra Bowen okayed the use of systems that failed prior security audits provided they make a few last minute attempts to appear invulnerable, a security penetration team revealed that an ES&S test system was no better than the rest. Reportedly, Red Team researchers were able to circumvent physical blocks with little effort, and they were even able to access internal files by making a quick and dirty change to the BIOS and booting it up with an external memory device. Needless to say, this deceased horse has been bludgeoned quite enough, but if you’re interested in seeing a dozen pages of epic failure, the read link has got you covered. [Warning: PDF read link]

[Via ArsTechnica, image courtesy of USA Today]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in security, evoting, voting, crack, cracked, hacked, e-voting, inkavote, red team, RedTeam, vot | No Comments »

Contact

Email Me!

Blogroll:

Search:

Meta:

Blogarama - The Blog Directory