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Post by Willing Sniper on Jul 30, 2017 9:55:12 GMT -8
Hackers Demonstrate How to Crack Into Electronic Voting Machines in Minutes Disturbing footage from the at DEF CON 25 hacker convention. By Lulu Friesdat / AlterNet July 29, 2017
Who says America's electronic voting machinery cannot be hacked?
One of the world's largest and best-known hacker conventions, DEF CON, debuted an interactive "Voting Machine Hacker Village" this year at its annual gathering in Las Vegas. In some cases within minutes—and in other cases within a few hours—of the village doors' opening, hackers in attendance said they had successfully breached some systems. The security investigators claimed to have found major vulnerabilities or claimed to have breached every voting machine and system present.
Members of the DEF CON hacking community said they took complete control of an e-poll book: a type of election equipment in use in dozens of states where voters arrive at precincts, sign in and receive their ballots. Other targets that hackers claim had major security flaws include the Sequoia AVC Edge, currently in use in 13 states and the AccuVote TSX, currently in use in 19 states. (Those machine usages are according to Verified Voting, an election transparency advocacy group.)
The organizers of Voting Village emphasized that, in the past, corporations had resisted acknowledging the security flaws surrounding computer systems. After laws were passed requiring businesses to acknowledge security breaches, there has been a significant change in corporate security culture. DEF CON participants expressed the conviction that a similar trajectory is necessary for U.S. election officials.
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Post by ♥ Apple ♥ on Jul 30, 2017 11:22:00 GMT -8
Hackers Demonstrate How to Crack Into Electronic Voting Machines in Minutes Disturbing footage from the at DEF CON 25 hacker convention. By Lulu Friesdat / AlterNet July 29, 2017
Who says America's electronic voting machinery cannot be hacked? One of the world's largest and best-known hacker conventions, DEF CON, debuted an interactive "Voting Machine Hacker Village" this year at its annual gathering in Las Vegas. In some cases within minutes—and in other cases within a few hours—of the village doors' opening, hackers in attendance said they had successfully breached some systems. The security investigators claimed to have found major vulnerabilities or claimed to have breached every voting machine and system present. Members of the DEF CON hacking community said they took complete control of an e-poll book: a type of election equipment in use in dozens of states where voters arrive at precincts, sign in and receive their ballots. Other targets that hackers claim had major security flaws include the Sequoia AVC Edge, currently in use in 13 states and the AccuVote TSX, currently in use in 19 states. (Those machine usages are according to Verified Voting, an election transparency advocacy group.) The organizers of Voting Village emphasized that, in the past, corporations had resisted acknowledging the security flaws surrounding computer systems. After laws were passed requiring businesses to acknowledge security breaches, there has been a significant change in corporate security culture. DEF CON participants expressed the conviction that a similar trajectory is necessary for U.S. election officials. Easy peasy
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Post by Willing Sniper on Jul 30, 2017 12:00:02 GMT -8
Crazy right? 30 some odd states are under republican control. But they're trustworthy
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