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Activists Find More E-Vote Flaws 
By Kim Zetter 
Wired News 
9-22-4
 
Voting activist Bev Harris and a computer
scientist say they found more vulnerabilities in
an electronic voting system made by Diebold
Election Systems, weaknesses that could allow
someone to alter votes in the election this
November. 
  
Diebold said Harris' claims are without merit and
that if anyone did manage to change votes, a
series of checks and balances that election
officials perform at the end of an election would
detect the changes. 
  
Harris demonstrated the vulnerabilities to
officials in the California secretary of state's
office several weeks ago and will be showing them
to federal legislative staff and journalists
Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Harris and another
activist have filed a lawsuit against Diebold in
California, which the state has joined,
maintaining that Diebold engaged in aggressive
marketing to sell millions of dollars worth of
equipment that it knew was insecure. Harris and
the activist stand to make millions from the suit
if they and the state win their case. 
  
The vulnerabilities involve the Global Election
Management System, or GEMS, software that runs on
a county's server and tallies votes after they
come in from Diebold touch-screen and
optical-scan machines in polling places. The GEMS
program generates reports of preliminary and
final election results that the media and states
use to call the winners. 
  
David Jefferson, a computer scientist at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory and a member of the
California secretary of state's voting systems
panel, agreed with Diebold that election
procedures could help prevent or detect changes
in votes, but said that election officials and
poll workers do not always follow procedures.
Therefore, election observers need to know about
the vulnerabilities so they can help reduce the
risk that someone could use them to rig an
election. 
  
Jefferson added that he doesn't believe that the
vulnerabilities show deliberate malice on
Diebold's part to aid fraud, as Harris has
sometimes contended in public statements. But the
vulnerabilities do show incompetence and indicate
that Diebold programmers simply don't know how to
design a secure system. 
  
Harris said the problem lies in the fact that
GEMS creates two tables of data that don't always
match. One table consists of rows showing votes
for each candidate that were recorded on voting
machine memory cards at each precinct. The other
table consists of summaries of that precinct
data. Officials use the raw precinct data to
spot-check accuracy. For example, if all of the
machines at a precinct record a total of 620
votes for Arnold Schwarzenegger, then the data in
GEMS should show 620 votes for Schwarzenegger for
that precinct. The official results that go to
the state are based on the vote summaries
produced by GEMS. 
  
When election officials run a report on GEMS on
election night, it creates the vote summaries
from the raw precinct data. Then as absentee and
provisional ballots get counted after Election
Day and added into GEMS, the raw data numbers
increase, while the vote summaries remain the
same until the next time officials run a summary
report and it regenerates totals from the raw
precinct data. 
  
Harris said it's possible to alter the vote
summaries while leaving the raw data alone. In
doing so, the election results that go to state
officials would be manipulated, while the canvas
spot check performed on the raw data would show
that the GEMS results were accurate. Officials
would only know that the summary votes didn't
match precinct results if they went back and
manually counted results from each individual
polling place and compared them to the vote
summaries in GEMS. 
  
Diebold said because the two sets of data are
coupled in GEMS it would be impossible for
someone to change the summaries without changing
the precinct data that feeds the summaries. And
if they did, the system would flag the change. 
  
But Harris said it's possible to change the
voting summaries without using GEMS by writing a
script in Visual Basic -- a simple, common
programming language for Windows-based machines
-- that tricks the system into thinking the votes
haven't been changed. GEMS runs on the Windows
operating system. 
  
The trick was uncovered by Herbert Thompson,
director of security technology at Security
Innovation and a teacher of computer security at
the Florida Institute of Technology. Thompson has
authored several nonfiction books on computer
security and co-authored a new novel about
hacking electronic voting systems called The
Mezonic Agenda: Hacking the Presidency. 
  
After Harris met Thompson at the Defcon hacker
conference this year, she asked him to examine
the GEMS program. He found he could write a
five-line script in the Notepad text editor that
would change the vote summaries in GEMS without
changing the raw precinct data. The auditing log
in GEMS wouldn't record the change because it
only tracks changes that occur within GEMS, not
changes that occur on the computer outside of
GEMS. 
  
After writing the script, Thompson saved it as a
Visual Basic file (.vbs) and double-clicked it to
execute it. 
  
The command happens in the background where no
one can see it. To verify that the changes
occurred, Thompson could write another script to
display the vote data in a message box after the
change. Once the scripts finished their work,
they would go into the Recycle Bin, where
Thompson could delete them. 
  
When Harris demonstrated the vulnerability to
officials in California, she opened the GEMS
program to show that the votes changed as the
script commanded them to. 
  
"You have to know in advance what you want to
change," Thompson said, "but it's pretty easy to
write a script to find the data that you want to
change. If you want Stan Smith to have more votes
than he currently has, you write a line of your
script that says select everything in the table
where candidate equals Stan Smith, and increment
the votes. Then you delete the votes from another
candidate by the same amount." 
  
Thompson acknowledged that the hack would take an
insider with knowledge of the voting system and
election procedures and access to GEMS. But this
could include technical people working for a
county or Diebold employees who sometimes assist
technically challenged election officials on
election night. It's unlikely that unsavvy
election officials or observers would notice or
understand the significance of someone writing
five lines of code in Notepad. 
  
Thompson was pretty stunned to find that some of
the same vulnerabilities that appear in the
Diebold system appear in the fictional voting
system he and his co-author created in their
recent novel. 
  
"When we wrote the book, we thought the election
system it described was a bit far-fetched,"
Thompson said. "We thought it's impossible that
any real voting system would have these problems.
Then we saw the GEMS software, and it had four of
the vulnerabilities that we wrote about in the
book." 
  
Thompson said Diebold could easily have designed
the system to use cryptographic hashes to detect
if vote summaries changed when they weren't
supposed to change. But he said the company
probably never imagined a scenario in which
someone would change the vote data through
Windows, bypassing the audit logs. 
  
There is one way in which changing vote totals in
GEMS might not work. If someone changed the
summary totals before all precinct votes came in,
the altered summary votes would be written over
with the new precinct data once election
officials ran another summary report. But Harris
said that "a hidden program for vote
manipulation" exists in GEMS that could allow
"any teenager or terrorist with a laptop" or
"anyone with an agenda or a profit motive" to
trick the system into thinking the votes haven't
changed by using what Harris calls a "two-digit
code" or trigger in GEMS. 
  
Thompson said the "hidden program" is more of a
feature in GEMS that is put there for a good
reason, but is easily abused. GEMS has a method
for flagging whether vote data is old or
up-to-date by marking it with a 0 or a -1.
Thompson said it's likely that when election
officials run a new summary report, the 0 and -1
tell the program which data is old and which is
new or updated. But someone could trick the
system into thinking that old data is updated
data by switching the numbers. Harris was able to
do this easily in demonstrations. 
  
When asked to comment on this, Diebold sent Wired
News an excerpt from a seven-page rebuttal that
it distributed to election officials to counter
Harris' claims. The excerpt said that the
flagging feature is "typically used (for example)
to reset any test results that were uploaded as
part of any pre-election testing." No further
explanation of this feature was forthcoming. 
  
But speaking generally on the vulnerabilities
Harris mentions, Diebold spokesman David Bear
said by phone that no one would risk manipulating
votes in an election because it's against the law
and carries a heavy penalty. He also said that
election "policies and procedures dictate that no
(single) person has access or is in control of a
(voting) system," so it would be impossible for
anyone to change votes on a machine without
others noticing it. And even if someone managed
to change the votes, auditing procedures would
detect it. 
  
Diebold spokesman Mark Radke said that after an
election, counties are supposed to go back to the
memory cards taken from voting machines and
manually add vote totals stored on the cards as
well as vote totals on a paper printout that poll
workers take from each machine at the close of
the polls. Officials compare these totals to the
GEMS summary totals and if there is a
discrepancy, Radke said, the totals from the
memory cards take precedence over the GEMS
totals. 
  
Jefferson, the Lawrence Livermore computer
scientist, agreed that election procedures
usually indicate that there should not be one
person operating the counting software. He also
agreed with Bear that officials could catch
discrepancies in vote totals if they went back
and manually added up the results from every
individual polling place and compared the totals
with the tallies in the summary report. But
Jefferson said that election officials and poll
workers don't always follow procedures. In the
California March primary, he pointed out, several
counties refused to follow procedures that were
requested by the secretary of state's office and
others failed to follow procedures that are
mandated under California election law. 
  
Rather than creating a system that relies on the
"perfect execution of (poll worker) procedures,"
Jefferson said, Diebold should have designed the
system to better prevent fraud. 
  
"You don't want to make up for poor design by
adding more burden to beleaguered poll workers
and election officials who don't understand the
reasons for all of the rules that they have to
obey and (are therefore) likely to cut corners,"
Jefferson said. 
  
As for why Diebold would have designed such a
poor system, Jefferson thinks the company simply
didn't know how to do it any better. 
  
"There are a lot of reasons why you might want
parallel tables of vote totals," Jefferson said.
"But there are better designs that avoid (these
vulnerabilities) entirely. If you are not a
world-class designer, if you're making it up as
you go along and not deeply educated in data
management, this is the kind of design you might
come up with. 
  
"I think the designers of the Diebold system
never seriously understood what it would take to
prevent vote manipulation by insiders," Jefferson
said. "I consider that to be inexcusable." 
  
  
� Copyright 2004, Lycos, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
http://wired.com/news/evote/0,2645,65031,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1
 

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