Worried about election hacking, L.A. County officials are turning to hackers for help
Local election officials are looking for some good hackers.
As part of an effort to create a new voting system, Los Angeles County computer specialists are headed this week to Defcon, one of the worldâs largest hacking conventions, where attendees will try to compromise a new target â" voting equipment.
County Registrar-Recorder Dean C. Logan said he hopes Defconâs new Voting Village will give his staff more to worry about as they work to revamp the way Los Angeles County votes.
Defcon, which draws 20,000 participants to Las Vegas yearly, has set aside a space this year for hackers to pick apart voting machines, assail voter-registration databases and carry out mock attacks on various voting processes from around the country.
In time-honored Defcon style, some will play offense and some will play defense, and the point is to expose vulnerabilities.
Defcon founder and Chief Executive Jeff Moss, known by the online moniker Dark Tangent, said he and fellow Defcon planners have spent months buying voting equipment on EBay to prepare for the event.
He said he hopes the Voting Village will spur new interest in problems in U.S. election systems.
âHackers are always looking for something new to play with,â said Moss, who seemed almost to be rubbing his hands: âItâs going to be such a rich area!â
The event comes at a moment of heightened interest in possibilities for election tampering.
American intelligence officials released an assessment in January saying that, although the vote count was not affected, Russian-government hackers interfered in the 2016 national election. The report said they hacked Democratic National Committee networks and officialsâ emails and selectively leaked material in an effort to damage Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
Russian hackers had gained access to state and local electoral boards in an effort to learn about their processes and equipment, according to the assessment, and Kremlin-linked sources pushed negative stories about Clintonâs health and charity. In addition, the sources sponsored social media campaigns to amplify scandals about her and denigr ate her candidacy.
Last month, Homeland Security officials went even further, saying the FBI had found evidence that Russian-backed hackers had penetrated election systems in 21 states in 2016, including Illinois and Arizona.
Security advocates are âvery, very worriedâ about hackersâ next moves, said Barbara Simons, a prominent San Francisco computer scientist who leads Verified Voting, a nonprofit election-security advocacy group.
Simons, who will open the Defcon event Friday at Caesars Palace, said she hopes to use the occasion to kick off her groupâs national awareness campaign about âour broken voting systemâ and require voter-marked paper ballots nationally.
Los Angeles County officials, meanwhile, are years into a $15-million effort to develop what they call a new âvoting experienceâ to replace the card-and-stylus system now in use because, they say, itâs too hard to replace broken parts on the old system, and too hard to adapt it to r eforms aimed at making voting easier.
They have proposed a replacement that features a prototype electronic, touch-screen ballot marker and an open-source software platform for tallying. A pilot program will be in votersâ hands next year, and all county voters may be switched to the new system as early as 2020.
In concept, L.A. Countyâs plans dovetail with what security advocates such as Simons have been calling for â" in part because they preserve the paper ballot.
Paper balloting may seem anachronistic. But in the new world of rampant cyber-insecurity, paper is almost seen as cutting edge. âPaper is a very good thing,â said Simons, whose group also advocates mandatory audits of computer tallies.
Logan, the registrar, said paper ballots are key to keeping the proposed system secure and convincing voters to trust it. After using the touch screen, he said, voters will be able to examine their printed ballot and place the card in a box by hand, he sai d.
The proposed switch to open-source tallying software also reflects current security thinking, Logan said.
Open-source systems donât rely on secret, proprietary code. And although they arenât immune to intrusions of malicious code, âyou have a better chance of finding it than with proprietary code,â Simons said.
Despite the plaudits the countyâs voting reform effort has won â" it was a semifinalist for a Harvard government award â" Logan said he wants the proposed system to face even tougher tests.
Enter Defcon, with its whiff of outlaw credibility and its democratic style of ferreting out the latest computer break-in techniques.
âThere is a past history in the election community ... to kind of resist this kind of event,â Logan said. âBut we need to embrace this. We need to know what the threats are.â
Logan said itâs too early to send the countyâs proof-of-concept for a new election system to Defcon, but thatâs in the works for next year.
For now, three specialists plan to go â" all of whom are involved in reviewing the proposed new voting systems. They aim to learn how to better detect, and defend against, hacks, Logan said. Theyâll be on the lookout for hackers with what he called âhands-onâ experience. Logan plans to invite the hackers to attack the proposed system as a test down the line â" to âkick the tires,â as he put it.
Moss, the Defcon founder, said the idea for the Voting Village grew out of conversations with fellow researchers after the 2016 national election and hacking controversy.
As he talked to coding experts and dug up academic studies, he said he was struck by how little had been done to put manufacturersâ equipment-safety claims to the test.
In particular, he said thereâs been a dearth of recent studies of complete, end-to-end election systems.
Tight proprietary control of back-end software makes it difficult to simulate such sys tems, he said. So this yearâs Defcon attendees will have to settle for dismantling pieces of them.
Organizers have collected 25 pieces of election equipment, most of which is still used. Paper will not be spared: poll books and the punch-card systems, whose ambiguous hanging chads caused headaches in the George W. Bush-Al Gore presidential race in 2000, will be on hand and ready to be preyed upon.
Defcon draws software specialists and mechanical hackers â" lock pickers, for example. So code-based and analog systems will get a work-over, Moss predicted.
Moss said he hopes to get election officials and cybersecurity researchers talking, and heâs seeking a complete simulated election system for Defconâs election event next year.
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