Experts agree that paper ballots are needed, but eight American states will use completely paperless machines in the 2020 elections regardless. What are your thoughts on this? Comment below. . Despite the obvious risk and years of warnings, at least eight American states and 16 million American voters will use completely paperless machines in the 2020 US elections, a new report by New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice found. Paperless voting machines persist despite a strong consensus among US cybersecurity and national security experts that paper ballots and vote audits are necessary to ensure the security of the next election. The Brennan Center report points to the Senate Intelligence Committee investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 section, which also recommends paper ballots for security and verification. The link for this article located at MIT Technology Review is no longer available. . In light of the danger, 16 million citizens are set to rely on electronic voting systems for their ballots, prompting worries.. Voting Security, Paperless Voting, Election Technology. . Brittany Day
Tuesday morning, as millions of Americans lined up at their polling places to participate in the often quite literally broken democratic process, a new Twitter account tweeted a link to a short manifesto: “today’s voting machines are often insecure, not particularly easy-to-use, and so expensive that they’re often used much longer than they were designed for and election officials are forced to hunt for replacement parts on eBay. The market has failed us.”. The announcement, from a new nonprofit called VotingWorks, ended with a promise to build a “secure, affordable, open-source voting machine” from the ground up. The letter wasn’t signed, but it’s the work of Ben Adida, a software developer who has studied voting machines for more than 20 years and had a PhD from MIT in secure voting. The link for this article located at Motherboard is no longer available. . A recent initiative, VoteTech, seeks to develop an innovative, cost-effective open-source electoral platform to supplant aging voting systems.. Open Source Voting Machines, Secure Voting Systems, Election Technology. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
DEFCON has hit back at criticisms levied at it by the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) over the introduction of an area designed to test voting machines. . In a statement released on 9th August, the NASS said that while it applauded “the goal of DEFCON attendees to find and report vulnerabilities in election systems" it felt it was important to point out that work has been done by states' own information technology teams, and also named the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Elections Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EI-ISAC), the private sector, the National Guard and universities as being involved “to enhance and reinforce their cyber postures with penetration testing, risk and vulnerability assessments and many other tools.” The link for this article located at InfoSecurity is no longer available. . NASS recognizes DEFCON's initiative to highlight vulnerabilities in voting systems, focusing on state-led enhancements for electoral security.. DEFCON Voting Machines,Cybersecurity Testing,Election Security,Pentest Methods. . Brittany Day
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