Security analysts recommend scrapping online voting plans
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A group of security analysts who have evaluated Defense Department plans for an online voting pilot have recommended that the plan be scrapped because its security cannot be ensured.<br>
A group of security analysts who have evaluated Defense Department plans for an online voting pilot have recommended that the plan be scrapped because its security cannot be ensured.
The analysts concluded 'Internet voting presents far too many opportunities for hackers or even terrorists to interfere with fair and accurate voting.'
DOD said it has no intention of stopping the program.
'Security was our Number One priority when we started on this concept,' DOD spokesman Glenn Flood said. 'The concerns raised by this minority group are not new to us. Measures have been put in place, and we have been working with state and local election officials to ensure the integrity of the system.'
The Secure Electronic Registration and Voting Experiment is a DOD program being operated by the Federal Voting Assistance Program. The goal is to ease absentee voting procedures for U.S. citizens living or serving overseas. SERVE is an expansion of a small program that counted a handful of overseas military votes in 2000. In this year's primary and general elections, as many as 100,000 voters from 50 counties in Arkansas, Florida, Hawaii, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Washington will be eligible to use the Web system.
Accenture LLP of Chicago received a contract to develop SERVE in 2002. The contract runs through March 2005 to allow for post-election review. Eligible voters will be able to register and cast votes from any PC with an Internet connection running Microsoft Windows 95 or later operating systems. Users access SERVE through the www.serveusa.gov website.
A 10-member Security Peer Review Group put together by the Federal Voting Assistance Program evaluated the system. A minority report was issued by four members of the group: David Jefferson of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Aviel D. Rubin of Johns Hopkins University, David Wagner of the University of California at Berkley and Barbara Simons, a consultant formerly with IBM Corp.
They said inherent flaws in proprietary software, the Internet and PCs from which votes would be cast make the process too risky to be used in a real election. Threats include: