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CSC 482/582: Computer Security

CSC 482/582: Computer Security. Electronic Voting Security. Topics. Do we have a right to vote? History of voting Voting fraud techniques Electronic voting. Voting Rights. Do we have a right to vote?. Voting Rights. Non-discrimination is protected 15 th (race) 19 th (sex)

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CSC 482/582: Computer Security

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  1. CSC 482/582: Computer Security Electronic Voting Security CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  2. Topics • Do we have a right to vote? • History of voting • Voting fraud techniques • Electronic voting CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  3. Voting Rights Do we have a right to vote? CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  4. Voting Rights Non-discrimination is protected • 15th (race) • 19th (sex) • 26th (age) But the SCOTUS majority concluded: "the individual citizen has no federal constitutional right to vote for electors for the President of the United States." (Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98, 104 (2000)) CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  5. Election Requirements • Privacy—voters have the right to keep their ballots secret. • Incoercibility—voters cannot prove contents of their ballots. • Accuracy—final tally is sum of all ballots. • Availability—voters should be able to vote when they reach the polling place. • Verifiability—voters can prove to themselves that their ballots were cast as intended and counted and that everyone can prove final tally is accurate. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  6. History of Voting Voice Voting • Observers can record votes. • So can others, leading to bribery and coercion. Ballots • Clay or tokens to represent vote from Greeks. • Black balls used for negative, white for positive. Paper Ballots • Used in Rome as early as 139 BCE. • Originally supplied by voters, later by parties. • Difficult to ensure privacy while avoiding fraud. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  7. History of Voting Australian Paper Ballot 1858 • Standardized paper ballot distributed at polls. • Marked in secret. • Adopted in US after fraud in 1884. • Problem: how to interpret marks • What type of mark (X, check)? • In-box vs. out of box? • Multiple selections? • Problem: spoiling votes • Counters can spoil votes withstray marks. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  8. Punched Card Systems 1964 Flaws • Hanging Chads • Dimpled Chads • Chad Jams HAVA 2002 • Reaction to 2000 Florida. • $3.8B to replace punch card + lever machines. • Accessibility requirements. • No security requirements. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  9. Types of Electronic Voting Optical scan • Voter marks paper ballots, which are counted based on darkness of mark like scan-tron tests. Direct-recording electronic (DRE) • Records vote count electronically. Networked DRE • Uploads vote count electronically. • Includes Internet voting. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  10. Advantages of e-voting • Accessibility • Cheaper per election costs due to no paper • Multi-lingual ballots • Speed of tabulation • Remote voting CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  11. Disadvantages of e-voting • Voters could be tracked • Lack of reliability • Lack of verification • Lack of transparency • Undetectable fraud (Rice’s theorem) • Wholesale fraud • More expensive due to voting machines CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  12. Are Voting Machines Reliable? Columbus, OH – An error while a Danaher / Guardian ELECTronic 1242 was plugged into a laptop to download results gave President Bush 3,893 extra votes.: http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techpolicy/evoting/2004-11-06-ohio-evote-trouble_x.htm Carteret Co., NC – More early voters voted on Unilect Inc.’s Patriot voting system than the system could handle resulting in the loss of more than 4,500 votes.: http://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/vote2004/2004-11-04-votes-lost_x.htm Broward Co., FL – ES&S software on their machines only reads 32,000 votes at a precinct then it starts counting backwards (see this update): http://www.news4jax.com/politics/3890292/detail.html Mecklenburg Co., NC – More votes registered than voters: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/news/politics/10094165.htm LaPorte County, IN - A bug in ES&S’ software causes each precinct to be reported as only having (exactly) 300 voters each; all reports add up to 22,000 voters in a county that has more than 79,000 registered voters.: http://www.heraldargus.com/content/story.php?storyid=5304 Utah County, UT - 33,000 straight-party ballots are not counted due to a programming error in punchcard counting equipment.: http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,595105309,00.html CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  13. Are Voting Machines Secure? “As long as I count the votes, what are you going to do about it?” • William Marcy “Boss” Tweed, 1871 CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  14. Voting Fraud History Altering voter lists • Register false voters. • Remove voters of groups unlikely to support you. Voter coercion and social engineering • Intimidate voters from going to polling place. • Threaten to fire employees. Physical tampering • Ballot stuffing • Destruction of ballot boxes CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  15. Voting Fraud Social Engineering • “Helping” blind or elderly people vote. • Voting in multiple precincts. • Impersonating another voter. • Selling votes. Control the counting of votes • Spoiling votes (making extra marks) • Subverting election officials. • Alter software that tallies votes. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  16. Election Process Targets • Registration • Nomination • Polling Place Access • Voter Manipulation • Ballot Manipulation • Tabulation CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  17. Threats • Individual Voters • Outside Attackers • Poll Workers • Election Officials • Equipment Vendors • Policy Makers CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  18. Registration Age (lowered to 18, 26th amendment, 1971) Race (15th amendment, 1870) Gender (20th amendment, 1920) Residency DC given presidential vote 23rd amendment, 1961. Property Ownership Poll taxes prohibited by 24th amendment, 1964. Criminal Record Most states disallow felons to vote in jail. Many states disallowing voting during parole. Only 2 states (KY,VA) permanently disallow. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  19. Voter Purges Bad Databases • 2004-05, SSA “resurrected” 23,366 records. Voters are purged secretly without notice. • County Election Commissioner Sue Sautermeister purged 10,000 voters before Mississippi March 2008 primary from her home PC. Bad Matching Criteria. • 2000, Florida, 60,000 purged based on 80% of surname + DOB. ~5000 appeals afterwards. • 2008, Muscogee County, GA, purged 700 voters based purely on name. 1/3 appealed. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  20. Voter Purges CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  21. Who Will Vote Robo-calls • Claim that voter can vote by phone. • Claim that voter is ineligible to vote. • Incorrect precinct or polling place. • Incorrect date. • Annoying calls appear to be from other party. Mandatory voting • Australia, Brazil, Greece, GA (1777), etc. • Shifts campaign from motivating base to convincing undecideds. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  22. Legal Voting Fraud Gerrymandering • Structure districts to control votes. • Maximize wasted votes for opposition. Excessive security • Require expensive ID. Unreasonable deadlines • Prevent military ballots. Limiting candidates • Third party candidate rules. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  23. Shortest Splitline Algorithm CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  24. Popular Vote (by county) CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  25. Electoral College Amplifies Fraud 1 CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  26. Electoral College Size CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  27. Electronic Voting (DRE) Reliability • History of inaccuracy. • Hardware failures (10% fail each election). Security • Designed like a PC. • Most use Windows CE. • Impossible to audit without paper trail. Usability • Support for disabilities, multiple ballots, languages. • Touch screen problems. • Hart double-selection ‘bug’ eSlate made by HartIC CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  28. E-Voting Problems in Florida 2000 Volusia County: Diebold voting machine gives Gore -16,022 votes, Bush 2,813 votes in a precinct of 585 voters. 2002 Broward County: With new voting machines, county loses 103,222 votes on election night. Found next day. 2004 Broward County: ."The software is not geared to count more than 32,000 votes in a precinct. So what happens when it gets to 32,000 is the software starts counting backward" 2006 Sarasota County: 16% undervote in House Race; other counties <1%. Buchanan beat Jennings by 373 votes. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  29. Voting Equipment by County CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  30. Diebold BallotStation • Setup D/L ballot setup • Pre-Election L&A testing • Election Voting • Post-Election Print result tape Transfer votes CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  31. Attack Scenarios Transferring Votes • Transfer vote from one candidate to another. • Leaves total number of votes unchanged. Denial of Service • Target precinct that votes for opponent. • Malware shuts down or wipes machine. • Forged administrative smartcard attack. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  32. Injecting Attack Code Direct installation • Reboot using smartcard with fboot.nbo. • Reboot using smartcard with explorer.glb. • Replace EPROM. • Voting machines use standard minibar keys. Virus • Infects memory cards. • Memory cards infect machines on boot. • Upgrades delivered via memory cards. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  33. Concealing Voting Malware Timing • Software only active in Election mode. • Software only active on certain dates / times. Knock • Activates only after secret “knock” given. Hiding processes and files • Rootkit techniques • Virtualization CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  34. Obama, McCain Campaigns Hacked Obama, McCain Campaign Computers Hacked Tech experts at the Obama headquarters initially believed that the computer systems had been invaded by a computer virus. By Antone Gonsalves,  InformationWeek Nov. 5, 2008 URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212000820 Computer systems used by the Obama and McCain campaigns were reportedly hacked over the summer by an unknown "foreign entity," according to an account of the attacks published Wednesday. The sophisticated cyberattacks has prompted a federal investigation, Newsweek reported Wednesday. Attacks on both campaigns were similar in that investigators believed a foreign entity or organization sought to steal information on policy positions. Such information could be used in negotiations with the future administration. Tech experts at the Obama headquarters initially believed that the computer systems had been invaded by a computer virus. The next day, however, they were told by the FBI and Secret Service that the problem was far more serious, the magazine reported. "You have a problem way bigger than what you understand," an agent told Obama's team, according to Newsweek. "You have been compromised, and a serious amount of files have been loaded off your system." Federal agents told Obama's aides that the McCain campaign had suffered a similar attack, which a top McCain official later confirmed to Newsweek. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  35. 2008 Voting Problems Kenton County, KY: 108 eSlate machines taken out of service 9am Tuesday due to malfunction. Judge allowed machines to be opened and paper ballots printed so they were counted. Punch machines were available as backups. Franklin County, OH: One Columbus precinct has 1,066 registered voters but posted 1,138 votes. In suburban Worthington, a precinct has 534 registered voters but counted 633 votes, and another has 951 registered voters but reported 1,095 votes. 35,000 forced to use provisional ballots due to a database ‘glitch.’ CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  36. Alternatives • Don’t use electronic voting machines. • Use voting machines to print ballots only; don’t use direct electronic counting. • Produce a secure electronic voting machine. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  37. Transparency Transparency of Process • Security requirements. • Reference implementations. • Public demonstrations. • Testing guidelines. Transparency of Elections • Transparent registration process. • Publicly viewable logs. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  38. Keep it Simple Keep it small and verifiable • Diebold Accuvote over 31,000 lines of C++ • Pvote consists of 460 lines of Python Prerendered ballots • Generate ballots as images before election. • Voting system is a simple finite state machine. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  39. Don’t Use Windows Windows has millions of lines of code. Security bug rates often over 1/KLOC. Last Tuesday’s updates: MS-10-071: Vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer … MS-10-086: Vulnerability in Microsoft Windows CSC 482/582: Computer Security XKCD 463

  40. VVPAT • Humans can’t read digital storage, so • Visually verified paper. PROBLEMS • Voters don’t verify. • Cuyahoga 2006: 9.6% of VVPAT destroyed, blank, or compromised. • Could print extra records if unattended. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  41. Physical Security Memory cards are easily stolen, modified. Tamper-evident Tape • Record serial numbers. • Check for tampering. Chain of custody • Serial numbers for each memory card. • Track chain of custody like evidence. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  42. Key Points • Election Requirements • Privacy • Incoercibility • Accuracy • Availability • Verifiability • Direct Electronic Voting (DRE) • Lack of reliability, verifiability, and security. • Possibility of undetectable wholesale fraud. • Alternatives • Use e-voting to mark ballots only. • Use simple pre-rendered systems with appropriate software and physical security. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

  43. References • Caltech/MIT Voting Project, “Residual Votes Attributable to Technology,” http://www.hss.caltech.edu/~voting/CalTech_MIT_Report_Version2.pdf#search=%22mit%20caltech%20uncounted%20ballots%22, 2001. • “More e-voting problems,” http://www.evoting-experts.com/, December 12, 2004. • Ariel J. Feldman, J. Alex Halderman, Edward W. Felten, “Security Analysis of the Diebold AccuVote-TS Voting Machine,” http://itpolicy.princeton.edu/voting, Sep 13, 2006. • Douglas Jones, “Illustrated Voting Machine History,” http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/voting/pictures/, 2003. • Tadayoshi Kohno, Adam Stubblefield, Aviel D. Rubin, Dan S. Wallach, “Analysis of an Electronic Voting System,”IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, Oakland, CA, May, 2004 • Mark Newman, “Election Result Maps,” http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mejn/election/, 2004. • Avi Rubin, Brave New Ballot, Morgan Road Books, 2006. • Kim Zetter, “House Dems seek Election Inquiry,” http://www.wired.com/news/evote/0,2645,65623,00.html, Nov 5, 2004. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerrymandering, 2007. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_fraud, 2007. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_system, 2006. CSC 482/582: Computer Security

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