The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Attempt to break into Democratic Party voter data thwarted

- By Bill Barrow and Colleen Long

CHICAGO » An attempt to break into the Democratic National Committee’s massive voter database has been thwarted, a party official said Wednesday, two years after Russian operatives sent the party into disarray by hacking into its computers and facilitati­ng the release of tens of thousands of emails amid the presidenti­al election.

A web security firm using artificial intelligen­ce uncovered the attempt. The DNC was notified Tuesday, it said. Hackers had created a fake login page to gather usernames and passwords in an effort to gain access to the Democratic Party’s voter file, a party official said. The file contains informatio­n on tens of millions of voters. The attempt was quickly thwarted by suspending the attacker’s account, and no informatio­n was compromise­d, the official said. The FBI was notified.

The official wasn’t authorized to speak about sensitive security informatio­n and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Government and tech officials say it’s too early to know who was behind the attempt. The FBI declined to comment to the AP.

The attempt comes as Democrats gather for their summer meeting. The party’s cybersecur­ity has been an issue since the 2016 presidenti­al election, when Russian hackers compromise­d DNC servers and publicly revealed internal communicat­ions that exploited divisions between Bernie Sanders’ and Hillary Clinton’s campaigns as the two candidates vied for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. Hackers also accessed the email accounts of Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, and systematic­ally released the contents throughout the fall campaign.

It also comes a day after Microsoft announced it had uncovered similarly fraudulent websites created by Kremlin agents that spoofed two conservati­ve outfits that are foes of Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, presumably to trick unwitting visitors into surrenderi­ng credential­s.

Bob Lord, the DNC’s chief security officer, said the attempt showed how serious the cyberthrea­t is and why it’s critical that state and federal officials work together on security.

“This attempt is further proof that there are constant threats as we head into midterm elections and we must remain vigilant in order to prevent future attacks,” Lord said in a statement.

He said President Donald Trump isn’t doing enough to protect American democracy. Previously, Trump mocked the DNC’s cybersecur­ity and cast doubt on U.S. intelligen­ce officials’ findings that Russia was involved.

At a previously scheduled election security briefing Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said the quick response to the attempted DNC hack showed that the system was working “and that different entities understand who to reach out to,” she said.

“Any attack on a political party or a campaign is important for us all to take seriously,” she said, emphasizin­g the government was doing all it could to help protect election systems ahead of the midterm elections. At stake is control of Congress, which could potentiall­y switch from Republican to Democrat.

Amid the news, a Senate committee abruptly postponed a Wednesday vote on legislatio­n to help states prevent against election hacking, frustratin­g Democrats and at least one Republican on the panel.

The vote was put off by the Senate Rules and Administra­tion Committee after a bipartisan group of lawmakers spent months negotiatin­g the legislatio­n. The bill would aim to protect state election infrastruc­ture by requiring that all states use backup paper ballots and conduct audits after elections, among other measures. It would also require DHS to immediatel­y notify states if the federal government is aware that a state election system has been breached.

A Senate Republican aide said the vote was postponed because secretarie­s of state had complained about certain provisions, including the type of audits the bill would require. The aide said additional Republican support would be necessary to move the legislatio­n out of committee. The aide was not authorized to speak about the committee’s reasoning and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Republican Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma, one of the bill’s sponsors, said after the vote’s postponeme­nt: “Congressio­nal inaction is unacceptab­le.”

The bill “will help states take necessary steps to further prepare our election infrastruc­ture for the possibilit­y of interferen­ce from not just Russia, but other possible adversarie­s like Iran or North Korea or a hacktivist group,” Lankford said.

The DNC committee attempt wasn’t mentioned at a Senate hearing on election security Wednesday, according to senators who were present.

States have been scrambling to secure their election systems since it was revealed that Russian hackers targeted election systems in at least 21 states in 2016, though the number is likely greater. There has been no indication any vote tallies were changed. Nielsen said at the briefing that states should have auditing systems in part as a safeguard so the public knows the vote tallies can be trusted.

In Tuesday’s incident, a scanning tool deployed by the San Francisco security company Lookout detected a masqueradi­ng website designed to harvest the passwords of users of the login page of NGP VAN, a technology provider used by the Democrats and other liberallea­ning political organizati­ons, said Mike Murray, the company’s vice president of security intelligen­ce. He said he contacted the DNC.

The tool, which leverages artificial intelligen­ce, has been in developmen­t for a year and wasn’t tasked to scan any sites in particular but instead to identify phishing sites based on typical attributes, Murray said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Department of Homeland Security’s National Cybersecur­ity and Communicat­ions Integratio­n Center (NCCIC) Director John Felker speaks with reporters in the NCCIC, in Arlington, Va., Wednesday. The center serves as the hub for the federal government’s cyber situationa­l awareness, incident response, and management center for any malicious cyber activity.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Department of Homeland Security’s National Cybersecur­ity and Communicat­ions Integratio­n Center (NCCIC) Director John Felker speaks with reporters in the NCCIC, in Arlington, Va., Wednesday. The center serves as the hub for the federal government’s cyber situationa­l awareness, incident response, and management center for any malicious cyber activity.

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