December 15, 2024

Election security as a national security issue

We recently learned that Russian state actors may have been responsible for the DNC emails recently leaked to Wikileaks. Earlier this spring, once they became aware of the hack, the DNC hired Crowdstrike, an incident response firm. The New York Times reports:

Preliminary conclusions were discussed last week at a weekly cyberintelligence meeting for senior officials. The Crowdstrike report, supported by several other firms that have examined the same bits of code and telltale “metadata” left on documents that were released before WikiLeaks’ publication of the larger trove, concludes that the Federal Security Service, known as the F.S.B., entered the committee’s networks last summer.

President Obama added that “on a regular basis, [the Russians] try to influence elections in Europe.” For the sake of this blog piece, and it’s not really a stretch, let’s take it as a given that foreign nation-state actors including Russia have a large interest in the outcome of U.S. elections and are willing to take all sorts of unseemly steps to influence what happens here. Let’s take it as a given that this is undesirable and talk about how we might stop it.

It’s bad enough to see foreign actors leaking emails with partisan intent. To make matters worse,  Bruce Schneier in a Washington Post op-ed and many other security experts in the past have been worried about our voting systems themselves being hacked. How bad could this get? Several companies are now offering Internet-based voting systems alongside apparently unfounded claims as to their security. In one example, Washington D.C. looked at using one such system for its local elections and had a “pilot” in 2010, wherein the University of Michigan’s Alex Halderman and his students found and exploited significant security vulnerabilities. Had this system been used in a real election, any foreign nation-state actor could have done the same. Luckily, these systems aren’t widely used.

How vulnerable are our nation’s election systems, as they’ll be used this November 2016, to being manipulated by foreign nation-state actors? The answer depends on how close the election will be. Consider Bush v. Gore in 2000. If an attacker, knowing it would be a very close election, had found a way to specifically manipulate the outcome in Florida, then their attack could well have had a decisive impact. Of course, predicting election outcomes is as much an art as a science, so an attacker would need to hedge their bets and go after the voting systems in multiple “battleground” states. Conversely, there’s no point in going after highly polarized states, where small changes will have no decisive impact. As an attacker, you want to leave a minimal footprint.

How good are we at defending ourselves? Will cyber attacks on current voting systems leave evidence that can be detected prior to our elections? Let’s consider the possible attacks and how our defenses might respond.

Voter de-registration: The purpose of a many attacks is simply to break things. Applied with partisan intent, you’d want to break things for one party more than the other. The easiest attack would be to hack a voter registration system, deleting voters who you believe are likely to support the candidate you don’t like. For voters who have registered for a political party, you know everything you need to know for who to delete. For independent voters you can probabilistically infer a their political opinions based on how their local precinct votes and on other demographic variables. (Political scientists do this sort of thing all the time.) Selectively destroying voter registration databases is likely to be recoverable. Such voters could demand to vote “provisional ballots” and those ballots would get counted as normal, once the voter registration databases were restored.

Vote flipping: A nastier attack would require an attacker to access the computers inside DRE voting systems. (“Direct recording electronic” systems are typically touch-screen computers with no voter-verifiable paper trail. The only record of a voter’s ballot is stored electronically, inside the computer.) These voting systems are typically not connected to the Internet, although they do connect to election management computers, and those sometimes use modems to gather data from remote precincts. (Details vary from state to state and even county to county.) From the perspective of a nation-state cyber attacker, a modem might as well be a direct connection to the Internet. Once you can get malware into one of these election management computers, you can delete or flip votes. If you’re especially clever, you can use the occasional connections from these election management computers to the voting machines and corrupt the voting machines themselves. (We showed how to do these sort of viral attacks as part of the California Top to Bottom Review in 2007.)

With paperless DRE systems, attacked by a competent nation-state actor, there will be no reason to believe any of the electronic records are intact, and a competent attacker would presumably also be good enough to clean up on their way out, so there wouldn’t necessarily even be any evidence of the attack.

The good news is that paperless DRE systems are losing market share and being replaced slowly-but-surely with several varieties of paper-ballot systems (some hand-marked and electronically scanned, others machine-marked). A foreign nation-state adversary can’t reach across the Internet and change what’s printed on a piece of paper, which means that a post-election auditing strategy to compare the electronic results to the paper results can efficiently detect (and thus deter) electronic tampering.

Where would an adversary attack? The most bang-for-the-buck for a foreign nation-state bent on corrupting our election would be to find a way to tamper with paperless DRE voting systems in a battleground state. So where then? Check out the NYT’s interactive “paths to the White House” page, wherein you can play “what-if” games on which states might have what impact in the Electoral College. The top battleground state is Florida, but thanks in part to the disastrous 2006 election in Florida’s 13th Congressional district, Florida dumped its DRE voting systems for optically scanned paper ballots; it would be much harder for an adversarial cyber attack to go undetected. What about other battleground states? Following the data in the Verified Voting website, Pennsylvania continues to use paperless DREs as does Georgia. Much of Ohio uses DRE systems with “toilet paper roll” printers, where voters are largely unable to detect if anything is printed incorrectly, so we’ll lump them in with the paperless states. North Carolina uses a mix of technologies, some of which are more vulnerable than others. So let’s say the Russians want to rig the election for Trump. If they could guarantee a Trump win in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Ohio, and North Carolina, then a Florida victory could put Trump over the top. Even without conspiracy theories, Florida will still be an intensely fought battleground state, but we don’t need a foreign government making it any worse.

So what should these sensitive states do in the short term? At this point, it’s far too late to require non-trivial changes in election technologies or even most procedures. They’re committed to what they’ve got and how they’ll use it. We could imagine requiring some essential improvements (security patches and updates installed, intrusion detection and monitoring equipment installed, etc.) and even some sophisticated analyses (e.g., pulling voting machines off the line and conducting detailed / destructive analyses of their internal state, going beyond the weak tamper-protection mechanisms presently in place). Despite all of this, we could well end up in a scenario where we conclude that we have unreliable or tampered election data and cannot use it to produce a meaningful vote tally.

Consider also that all an adversary needs to do is raise enough doubt that the loser has seemingly legitimate grounds to dispute the result. Trump is already suggesting that this November’s election might be rigged, without any particular evidence to support this conjecture. This makes it all the more essential that we have procedures that all parties can agree to for recounts, for audits, and for what to do when those indicate discrepancies.

In case of emergency, break glass. If we’re facing a situation where we see tampering on a massive scale, we could end up in a crisis far worse than Florida after the Bush/Gore election of 2000. If we do nothing until after we find problems, every proposed solution will be tinted with its partisan impact, making it difficult to reach any sort of procedural consensus. Nobody wants to imagine a case where our electronic voting systems have been utterly compromised, but if we establish processes and procedures, in advance, for dealing with these contingencies, such as commissioning paper ballots and rerunning the elections in impacted areas, we will disincentivize foreign election adversaries and preserve the integrity of our democracy.

(Addendum: contingency planning was exactly the topic of discussion after Hurricane Sandy disrupted elections across the Northeast in November 2012. It would be useful to revisit whatever changes were made then, in light of the new threat landscape we have today.)

Related reading:

Comments

  1. Robert Nagle says

    Security issues matter more in states where the outcome can be decided by a slim margin. Switching away from the electoral college towards a National Popular Vote ( http://www.nationalpopularvote.com/ ) would also diminish this kind of vulnerability. That’s not the primary benefit of National Popular Vote, but a nice secondary one. Obviously though, having a paper trail would secure the system by creating a way to audit results.

    • This is an interesting thing to ponder. For better or for worse, the Electoral College system provides a firewall between states. No matter how corrupt or inept or hacked any state may be, it can only influence a fixed number of votes in the College. While a national popular vote would have the side-effect of eliminating the “battleground state” effect, it would replace it with a world where a very close election would be subject to the corruption/ineptitude/tampering of every single county and state. That doesn’t seem desirable.

  2. Salvatore says

    A recognizable electronic system, one day, will resolve the issuehttps://www.slideshare.net/mobile/salvatorelionetti/1-recognizable-system-42069620

  3. There is something a bit more brute force, but has been discussed. A cyber attack that causes the electrical grid to go down in a specific area. Consider who would win Colorado if Denver went dark. Or Illinois if Chicago did.
    Even if you have punch cards with a stylus, you can take the votes even if you can’t process them immediately. Or a pencil-paper scanner. If you have an electronic voting machine, no power means no votes.

    This doesn’t include the logistic problems when traffic lights don’t work and when you might have to change your plans to take care of something.

    • It’s certainly the case that a nation-state could mount a full-on denial of service attack on our power systems. My guess is that this would be interpreted in a military context and the response would be quite unpleasant for all parties.

      It’s perhaps more helpful to instead consider the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, which hit right before the November 2012 presidential election. Ostensibly, we were to have learned lessons from that and made suitable changes. It would be an interesting article if an investigative journalist wanted to do a four-years-later follow-up on this issue.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/13/nyregion/lessons-from-hurricane-sandy-being-applied-to-election-planning.html

  4. Rebecca Mercuri says

    What this essay omits mentioning is the next wave of flawed voting systems lurking in the wings. The aftermath of the hanging chad and the Help America Vote Act provided impetus and funding for opportunistic vendors to step in with poorly implemented products that were provably insecure. Similar will be happening as fears are raised while older systems are being phased out. Cryptography, online voting, ranked choice — all pose considerable transparency issues that are NOT currently resolvable, despite their proponents claims to the contrary. Beware of these solutions as they are, in many ways, worse than the current problems.