[ISN] Analysts call for hold on military e-voting

From: William Knowles (wk@private)
Date: Fri Jan 23 2004 - 08:05:16 PST

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2004/0119/web-evoting-01-22-04.asp
    
    By Michael Hardy 
    Jan. 22, 2004
    
    A group of computer scientists is urging the Defense Department to 
    abandon a plan to let overseas personnel cast absentee ballots over 
    the Internet. 
    
    The system, called Secure Electronic Registration and Voting 
    Experiment (SERVE), will be implemented in time for November's 
    election, said DOD spokesman Glenn Flood. 
    
    Although security analysts who studied the system believe it could be 
    vulnerable to hacking and alteration of results, DOD officials do not 
    intend to change their plans.
    
    "We have confidence that it will be safe and secure for the general 
    election in November," he said. "We respect the work the team did, but 
    these are issues we knew about."
    
    The analysts include Avi Rubin, the Johns Hopkins University professor 
    who publicized potential security hazards last year in electronic 
    voting machines. They concluded that because SERVE uses Microsoft 
    Corp.'s Windows operating system and standard Internet technologies, 
    there is no way to make it secure.
    
    Some states could potentially use the system for primary elections, 
    although it won't be ready in time for the Feb. 3 primaries, he said. 
    "It's their call," he said.
    
    "The flaws are unsolvable because they are fundamental to the 
    architecture of the Internet," said David Wagner, an assistant 
    professor of computer science at the University of 
    California-Berkeley, and one of the researchers, in a written 
    statement. "It's simply not secure enough for something as serious as 
    the election of a government official."
    
    The researchers are worried that if the early trials of SERVE are 
    successful, federal and state governments will rush to expand its use, 
    assuming that it will be secure.
    
    "That's like saying you don't ever need to wear a seat belt because 
    you drove to work without crashing the car this morning," Rubin said.
    
    
    
    
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