• Expert Testifies in Court: Dominion Voting Systems Easily Hackable

    From slothe@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 25 00:01:08 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, law.court.federal, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: alt.politics.elections, atl.general

    A voting systems expert testifying in a Georgia trial last week
    demonstrated that Dominion Voting Systems machines were so easily hackable
    he could use a Bic pen and smart card to copy, edit, and change votes in seconds, according to Law360 Pulse, which is covering the trial.

    Professor J. Alex Halderman of the University of Michigan, the author of a highly publicized report detailing deficiencies in Dominion’s voting
    machines, testified at an Atlanta trial Thursday in a case filed in 2017 against the state of Georgia.

    The suit was originally filed by the Coalition for Good Governance, a
    liberal activist group, which claimed the state’s use of voting machines
    which include touch-screen computers to cast ballots without the benefit
    of a verifiable print ballot, made the voting counts susceptible to manipulation.

    After the suit, Georgia election officials changed their voting vendor in
    2020 to Dominion Voting Systems, which also used a touch-screen ballot but provided voters with a paper ballot containing a QR code containing their
    vote information.

    The Good Governance suit, however, asked a federal judge to order Georgia
    to stop using Dominion since they claimed their machines remain vulnerable
    to attack.

    The suit also claimed the Dominion machines offer voters a paper QR code
    that cannot easily be read to verify the accuracy of their vote.

    Halderman, who wrote a 96-page report in July 2021, began his
    demonstration before U.S. District Court Judge Amy Totenberg in Atlanta by asking a plaintiffs’ attorney to borrow a pen, Law360 Pulse reported.

    The professor then inserted the pen into the Dominion voting machine and
    held it there for a few seconds, which caused the machine to reboot into
    “safe mode,” according to Halderman.

    Halderman then explained that a person could copy or change files on the
    voting machine, change its operating settings, or install malware.

    Halderman said accessing the “terminal emulator” could allow a user to
    bypass the computer’s normal security settings and obtain “super-user”
    access — something that allows a person to read, monitor, and change “anything,” including ballots, on the voting machine with “no limits,”
    Law360 Pulse reported.

    “All it takes is five seconds and a Bic pen,” Halderman said.

    Halderman also inserted a “$10” smart card into the machine. He said such
    smart cards can be programmed to replicate cards used by poll workers,
    voters, and technicians to access the voting machines.

    The poll worker and voter cards can be used county-wide to “print as many ballots as you would like,” Halderman said.

    Plaintiffs’ attorneys played a video, taken outside the courtroom, showing Halderman using a USB flash drive to alter votes in a way undetectable to voters.

    The trial, which began Jan. 9, was over a case filed in 2017 by several
    voters and the Coalition for Good Governance against members of the State Election Board and then Georgia Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp.

    Judge Totenberg, from the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Georgia and a sister to NPR’s Nina Totenberg, is expected to issue a
    ruling in late spring or early summer. Totenberg was appointed by then- President Barack Obama.

    The plaintiffs say they are not disputing any election results in Georgia,
    and their case is unrelated to the 2020 election and the defamation
    lawsuits brought by Dominion, CBS News reported.

    After the 2020 election, Dominion claimed it was defamed by several
    parties, including Fox News, Newsmax, OANN, and several individuals.

    In April of 2023, Fox News settled its litigation with Dominion, paying
    the voting firm $787 million. Dominion’s litigation against Newsmax is
    ongoing in Delaware court.

    Newsmax has stated that it acted within the bounds of a media organization
    to report the public claims of President Donald Trump and his lawyers.

    At the time, Newsmax also reported that Dominion had denied all claims
    made by Trump and his team.

    During this period, Newsmax asked Dominion to appear on its network to
    rebut claims made by the president, but Dominion declined to do so.

    “In a democracy, there can be no more issue for important public
    discussion than the reliability of a voting company’s technology, and the current Georgia trial underscores the fact that the vulnerability of
    Dominion’s voting systems, machines and methodology remain highly
    concerning and of ongoing public interest,” Newsmax said in a statement.

    “Dominion’s lawsuit against Newsmax is nothing more than a political
    effort to squelch free speech and a free press,” Newsmax said.

    The network also noted that Dominion’s voting systems had been
    controversial before the 2020 election and was even the focus of a HBO documentary called “Kill Chain: The Cyber War on America’s Elections.”

    The early 2020 documentary alleged that Dominion’s machines were hackable
    and did not offer a verifiable audit of votes.

    In the Georgia case, Totenberg has already agreed with the plaintiffs that
    the direct-recording electronic voting machine system was outdated and
    “highly susceptible to manipulation and malfunction,” Courthouse News
    Service reported.

    In August 2019, she ordered the state to update the election system that
    had been used since 2002 ahead of the 2020 primaries.

    Current Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger entered a nearly
    $107 million contract with Dominion to install new ballot-counting devices
    that record votes in both the system’s software and with a printed QR
    barcode.

    Raffensperger continues to stand by the integrity of Dominion’s voting
    software and systems.

    “The Halderman report was the result of a computer scientist having
    complete access to the Dominion equipment and software for three months in
    a laboratory environment,” he explained in a June 2023 letter to the state legislature.

    “It identified risks that are theoretical and imaginary. Our security
    measures are real and mitigate all of them.”

    https://floppingaces.net/most-wanted/expert-testifies-in-court-dominion- voting-systems-easily-hackable/

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