The Asian Age

Hacking concern ahead of US polls

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Washington, Oct 7: At a Boston technology conference last month, computer scientist Alex Halderman showed how easy it was to hack into an electronic voting machine and change the result, without leaving a trace.

Halderman staged a mock election in which three conference attendees voted for George Washington, but an infected memory card switched the result to give a 2- 1 victory to Benedict Arnold, the military officer who sold secrets during the Revolution­ary War.

Halderman’s demonstrat­ion was on a voting machine still in use in 20 US states, which had no paper ballots that could be compared to the electronic output, and thus no way to determine if vote totals had been altered.

“What keeps me up at night is the threat that a hostile nation- state could probe every swing state or swing district ( and) find the ones most weakly protected, to change the results of a national election,” the University of Michigan professor said.

A month ahead of the mid- term congressio­nal polls, security experts say the risks remain high for a hack on voting machines or other targets.

The vote comes two years after the US national election in which, according to intelligen­ce officials, Russian agents probed voter registrati­on networks in at least 20 states and accessed at least one.

Halderman said the Russians had the ability to destroy or alter voting records, which could have led to chaos on election day.

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