Keywords: voting election fraud prevention electronic voting machines
subject to misuse fraud fraudulent steal elections
Researchers at Princeton University have released a new
"Security Analysis of the Diebold AccuVote-TS Voting Machine," which
finds many possibilities for election fraud in these particular
voting machines. Their report also recognizes that similar problems
likely exist with
other Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) voting machines, saying, "Simply
put, many computer scientists doubt that
paperless DREs can be made reliable and secure, and they expect that any
failures of such systems would likely go undetected."
Here is a direct quotation from this report, describing some of the
ways by
which the next election could be stolen (most footnotes removed) . . .
2.2 Injecting Attack Code
"To carry out these attacks, the attacker must somehow install his
malicious software on one or more voting machines. If he can get
physical access to a machine for as little as one minute, he can install
the software manually. The attacker can also install a voting machine
virus that spreads to other machines, allowing him to commit widespread
fraud even if he only has physical access to one machine or memory card.
2.2.1 Direct Installation
"An attacker with physical access to a machine would have least three
methods of installing malicious software. The first is to create
an
EPROM chip containing a program that will install the attack code into
the machine's flash memory, and then to open the machine, install the
chip on its motherboard, and reboot from the EPROM.
"The second method is to exploit a back door feature in Diebold's code
to
manually install the attack files from a memory card. When the machine
boots, it checks whether a file named explorer.glb exists on the
removable memory card. If such a file is present, the machine boots into
Windows Explorer rather than Diebold's BallotStation election software.
An attacker could insert a memory card containing this file, reboot the
machine, and then use Explorer to copy the attack files onto the machine
or run them directly from the card.
"The third method exploits a service feature of the machine's
bootloader.
On startup, the machine checks the removable memory card for a file
named
fboot.nb0. If this file exists, the machine replaces the bootloader code
in its onboard flash memory with the file's contents. An attacker could
program a malicious bootloader, store it on a memory card as fboot.nb0,
and reboot the machine with this card inserted, causing the Diebold
bootloader to install the malicious software. (A similar method would
create a malicious operating system image.)
"The first method requires the attacker to remove several screws and
lift
off the top of the machine to get access to the motherboard and EPROM.
The other methods only require access to the memory card slot and power
button, which are both behind a locked door on the side of the machine.
The lock is easily picked -- one member of our group, who has modest
locksmithing skills, can pick the lock consistently in less than 10
seconds. Alternatively, this slot can be reached by removing screws and
opening the machine. Some attackers will have access to keys that can
open the lock -- all AccuVote-TS machines in certain states use
identical
keys, there are thousands of keys in existence, and these keys can
be copied at a hardware or lock store.
"A poll worker, election official, technician, or other person who had
private access to a machine for as little as one minute could use these
methods without detection. Poll workers often do have such access; for
instance, in a widespread practice called 'sleepovers,' machines are
sent home with poll workers the night before the election.
2.2.2 Voting Machine Viruses
"Rather than injecting code into each machine directly, an attacker
could
create a computer virus that would spread from one voting machine to
another. Once installed on a single 'seed' machine, the virus would
spread to other machines by methods described below, allowing an
attacker with physical access to one machine (or card) to infect a
potentially large population of machines. The virus could be programmed
to install malicious software, such as a vote-stealing program or
denial-of-service attack, on every machine it infected.
"When the machine is rebooted, it normally emits a musical chime that
might be noticed during a stealth attack; but this sound can be
suppressed by plugging headphones (or just a headphone connector) into
the machine's headphone jack.
"To prove that this is possible, we constructed a demonstration virus
that spreads itself automatically from machine to machine, installing
our demonstration vote-stealing software on each infected system. Our
demonstration virus, described in Section 4.3, can infect machines and
memory cards. An infected machine will infect any memory card that is
inserted into it. An infected memory card will infect any machine that
is powered up or rebooted with the memory card inserted. Because cards
are transferred between machines during vote counting and administrative
activities, the infected population will grow over time.
"Diebold delivers software upgrades to the machines via memory cards: a
technician inserts a memory card containing the updated code and then
reboots the machine, causing the bootloader to install the new code from
the memory card. This upgrade method relies on the correct functioning
of the machine's bootloader, which is supposed to copy the upgraded code
from the memory card into the machine's flash memory. But if the
bootloader were already infected by a virus, then the virus could make
the bootloader behave differently. For example, the bootloader could
pretend to install the updates as expected but instead secretly
propagate the virus onto the memory card. If the technician later used
the same memory card to 'upgrade' other machines, he would in fact be
installing the virus on them. Our demonstration virus illustrates these
spreading techniques.
"Memory cards are also transferred between machines in the process of
transmitting election definition files to voting machines before an
election. According to Diebold,
'Data is downloaded onto the [memory] cards using a few [AccuVote]
units,
and then the stacks
of [memory] cards are inserted into the thousands of [AccuVote]
terminals to be sent to the polling places.'
"If one of the few units that download the data is infected,
it will transfer the infection via the 'stacks of [memory] cards' into
many voting machines."
Blessings to you. May God help us all.