Last month we learned that computer systems used
by both the U. S. Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) were hacked into, possibly by
Russia. The initial news reports
were confirmed by the FBI, which is investigating the breaches. While no actual damage appears to have
been done—yet—it is not clear what the hackers might have learned, and what
they might do with the information.
At a minimum, it is a chilling reminder that foreign powers can now remotely
meddle with systems vital to our democratic process: a political party's internal analytical tools, not to
mention electronic voting machines themselves.
A recent article on the Politico website enlarges on the latter possibility: that hackers, either foreign or
domestic, could diddle with electronic voting machines and the associated systems
enough to throw an election. Some
computer scientists at Princeton have made a career out of showing how various
brands of electronic voting machines can be hacked using simple methods that
are accessible to clever teenagers.
Usually, the hacks require physical access to the machines for a time,
but if polling-place workers are not quite vigilant enough, one can imagine
this happening. And then anything
can happen, from blatant count manipulation to subtle effects that would be
hard to catch in an audit. The
most vulnerable machines appear to be the touchscreen types that produce no
paper audit trail. Many states and
counties have recognized this vulnerability and have switched to
optically-scanned paper ballots which automatically produce a paper trail, but
even these systems can be hacked into at the count-totalling level where
laptops and computer networks are used to add up the results. But there are still a lot of old
vulnerable touchscreen systems in use.
The Politico
article decries the inconsistent patchwork nature of our voting technology in
the U. S., but fails to note that this can also be regarded as a strength. For offshore hackers to arrange a major
hijack of a national election and be fairly sure it would work, they would have
to target up-for-grabs states (several of them), get detailed information on
the wide variety of systems being used, and devise sub-hacks for each one. While this kind of operation could be
carried out, it's hard to see how, unless the foreign power had spies on the
ground in the various states to provide information that would not be available
any other way. Nevertheless, huge
elections can come down to a few critical votes in a few critical states, or even
one, as the "hanging-chad" adventures of the Florida vote count of
2000 proved, leaving the whole nation in suspense for weeks and making the U.
S. Supreme Court an unwilling participant in the election as well.
While I normally eschew discussions of politics in
this blog, I will limit my comments on the current Presidential contest to a
phrase I heard from someone whose position prevented him from venting a more
frank opinion about the candidates:
"It's a pity."
Pitiful or not, national electons are a vital part of
the way the U. S. government is made beholden to the people, and it is in the
interest of every citizen to see that the process is as fair and transparent as
possible. If a foreign country
manages to put its thumb on the scales, so to speak, it would betray the
election's whole purpose and be tantamount to invasion by a foreign power. For the same reason, contributions to domestic
political campaigns by foreign entities are generally prohibited by law.
Voting in elections is an odd mix of the highly
traditional and the cutting-edge high-tech. Most applications of engineering have fairly clearcut
goals: build a bridge here to
carry so much traffic and cost this much and take that long to build, for instance. But in voting, it's not always clear
what problems engineers are being called upon to solve.
Some readers may know that Thomas Edison's first
patent was for an electric vote recorder that received votes made by pushing
buttons, and printed out a paper tally of the results. He patented it in 1869 and a colleague
tried to get the U. S. Congress to adopt it. But getting through a roll-call vote faster by machine was
not something that the committee evaluating the machine wanted to do. As the committee chairman reportedly
said, "If there is any invention on earth that we don't want down here,
that is it." It wasn't until
the 1880s that any kind of voting machine was used in the U. S. in a general
election, and legislatures were among the last entities to adopt them for their
own voting process. So even the
great inventive genius himself misjudged what highly political organizations
really want in the way of automated voting.
Increasingly today, politics is about power. Power has always been a factor, but as
other cultural forces—tradition, religion, courtesy, even fairness—wane in
influence, the vacuum tends to be filled by the raw lust for power. So it is understandable that regimes
and individuals who see power as the mainspring and goal of politics will stop
at nothing to attain their aims. Just
as our military has to exercise constant vigilance to keep armed threats at
bay, we now have to defend the integrity of our elections from foreign
interference, which is a new thing to a lot of local officials whose worst concern
used to be finding enough volunteers to man the polls.
One of the best ideas for safeguarding election
integrity was proposed by a Princeton cybersecurity expert quoted in the Politico article. If each lowly precinct simply posts its
results in real time, on paper (and I would add, on the Internet too), allowing
independent vote-checking agencies to compile vote totals, this step
essentially eliminates any chance of an outside entity hacking into the
vote-totaling systems, because the multiple independent tallies would agree and
call into question the "official" total. To some extent, news agencies already do this, but the exact
data paths by which they obtain their vote totals is not obvious to the viewer,
and making it so would both raise their credibility and help ensure the
integrity of the whole system.
Casting a meaningful ballot is one of the most
important privileges of living in a democratic society. It is up to engineers and programmers
to make sure that the voting systems this fall will allow every qualified
citizen to do that. But it is up
to the citizens to use that power wisely.
Sources: I thank my wife for
drawing my attention to the Politico
article, "How to Hack an Election in 7 Minutes" by Ben Wofford,
published online on Aug. 5, 2016 at http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/08/2016-elections-russia-hack-how-to-hack-an-election-in-seven-minutes-214144. I also referred to a July 30 NBC News
article about the hacking of the Democratic Party systems at http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/clinton-campaign-computer-system-was-hacked-report-n620051. Details of Edison's first patented
invention, the vote recorder that nobody wanted, can be found at http://www.techtimes.com/articles/132791/20160211/thomas-edisons-first-patented-invention-could-have-drastically-changed-u-s-history.htm.
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