Diebold Voting Machines Hacked in Florida, USA
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UPDATE Dec. 16: Volusia County (FL) joins Leon in dumping Diebold. Due to contractual non-performance and security design issues, Leon County (Florida) supervisor of elections Ion Sancho has announced that he will never again use Diebold in an election. He has requested funds to replace the Diebold system from the county. On Tuesday, the most serious “hack” demonstration to date took place in Leon County. The Diebold machines succumbed quickly to alteration of the votes. This comes on the heels of the resignation of Diebold CEO Wally O'Dell, and the announcement that stockholder's class action suits and related actions have been filed against Diebold by four separate law firms. Further “hack” testing on additional vulnerabilities is tentatively scheduled before Christmas in the state of California.
Just goes to show how physical access is the weakest point in any system. Currently there are 1,200 of these voting machines in operation in the US, with 3 people typically having a high level of physical access. Scary stuff!
Source: http://www.bbvforums.org/cgi-bin/for...954/15595.html
Diebold CEO resigned few days ago
Hmm...me wonders why the Diebold CEO resigned last week. :o
I trully is amazing that a large company who's been in the ATM banking business for so many years screws up so bad in not testing the security of their voting machines. I mean, of all companies they SHOULD understand security....much less physical security having to secure ATMs.
Sigh....the stupidity of companies who rush to market in order to capture it before vetting out their products. I know, there's a balance...well Diebold's scales just tipped over. tsk tsk :confused:
Re: Diebold Voting Machines Hacked in Florida, USA
be
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Originally posted here by MasterTsunami
Just goes to show how physical access is the weakest point in any system. Currently there are 1,200 of these voting machines in operation in the US, with 3 people typically having a high level of physical access. Scary stuff!
Source: http://www.bbvforums.org/cgi-bin/for...954/15595.html
That would be 1200 locations, not 1200 machines. It is typical for each voting location to have anywhere from 5-15 voting machines depending on the size of the location, and the number of voters in that voting zone.