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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAt IT security-conference, it took hackers 2 MINUTES to hack a voting-machine.
https://www.theroot.com/a-conference-asked-hackers-to-see-which-voting-machines-1797434629Im sure youre thinking, With months of planning and coding, a really good computer expert could probably break into any system. Well, the experiment, called the Voter Hacking Village, wasnt announced beforehand. The organizers simply went online andOK, this is the insane partbought 30 voting machines off eBay!
If that fact stunned you, here are a few other things that might surprise you:
The machines with Advanced Voting Machines WINVote system, used in Virginia, Pennsylvania and Mississippi, all had the same password. The password (you might want to take a deep breath here) was abcde. The password could not be changed.
One group hacked the WINVote system through Wi-Fi, while another needed only a USB keyboard and mouse. An intern at a security company called Synack demonstrated that changing votes was as easy as updating a Microsof Office document. You just update the votes and change it back, she said.
One ExpressPoll voting machine, a voter tablet used as recently as April 2017 in a Georgia special election, had 600,000 voter registrations still on it, according to Wired. A hacker broke into that system in 45 minutes. The hacker was 16 years old.
hedda_foil
(16,375 posts)Blue_true
(31,261 posts)Unbelievable that systems would be made that would not allow users to set unique passwords. But even with unique passwords, hackers can break in if encryption protocol is weak, all they need is for a system admin to get careless with a password, in that case, even encryption can be defeated.
Most private VPN have a base level of encryption. Employees sign in with a password that the system recognizes and once the employee is on, the system constantly changes the base password to defeat someone who tries to piggyback on the employee, but don't have the employee password and IP address. The system is pretty strong, but if the employee is targeted and is careless, a hacker can get both the person's password and IP address, then try to mirror the employee's access privs.
RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)BOMBSHELL - ATTN Naysayers who think elections can't be stolen via machines -
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100210885412
and also this post: https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=10893190
niyad
(113,527 posts)Kentonio
(4,377 posts)*beats head against desk*
niyad
(113,527 posts)brush
(53,833 posts)into voting rolls of several states in 2016 and most likely had an effect on the election outcomelike maybe the counting of votes, or as you point out, altering voter registrationsyou get the repug talking point back that there is no evidence that the Russian hackers had any effect on the election.
I of course always answer them by responding they can believe that if they want to but I don't have to.
LanternWaste
(37,748 posts)and the bevy of pro-Putin posts we saw in 2016-17 trivializing US foreign policy vis-a-vis Moscow, it can really smell like Borscht around here at times.