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Ask Slashdot: Should The DHS Designate Elections As Critical Infrastructure? (politico.com) 279

The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly looking at designating elections as critical infrastructure, on par with the electricity grid or banking system, to help protect against cybersecurity threats. DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson said during a breakfast with reporters on August 3rd, "We should carefully consider whether our election system, our election process, is critical infrastructure. There is a vital national interest in our election process, so I do think to consider whether it should be considered by my department and others as critical infrastructure." Demerara writes: I'm fascinated to hear the opinions of Slashdotters on the practical implications of any decision to designate "elections" as critical national infrastructure. For those of you who have worked on systems that are already under this regime: given that there are just over 90 days to the November elections, what can be achieved with respect to elections and in particular to electronic voting machines (whether direct-recording electronic (DRE), touch screen etc., or precinct ballot scanning machines)? What might the designation require of state and county boards (the buyers of these systems) and what would the vendors have to do?
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Ask Slashdot: Should The DHS Designate Elections As Critical Infrastructure?

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  • by mhkohne ( 3854 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:48PM (#52646979) Homepage

    I'd be all for it. I just don't take DHS as being competent enough to actually make a real difference. In fact, I suspect they'd just add layers of policy and procedure that would further interfere with making sure our elections are fair.

    Yes, elections are critical, but NO, DHS isn't the right people to try to make it any better.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Classifying it as "critical infrastructure" would mean the introduction of voter ID laws. Which is good. I mean for fucks sake, what kind of third world country is the US when it doesn't even know who's voting and if they're even citizens?

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by jpapon ( 1877296 )
        You need to make a national ID program before you do that, so every citizen has easy and free access to an ID. *Then* you can make voter ID laws.

        Requiring IDs for voting before you actually have a national ID program is putting the cart before the horse.

        • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:45PM (#52647457) Journal

          You need to make a national ID program before you do that, so every citizen has easy and free access to an ID.

          No, you don't. You just need to mandate that the states provide it. Which would be a good idea, in general.

          Most (maybe all) states already have a very low cost "non-drivers ID", what we used to call a "drinker's license". If people are complaining that voter ID laws discriminate, then fix the difficulty in getting the ID, and leave the very sensible requirement to reduce vote fraud.

          Though, really, in-person vote fraud is likely to be peanuts compared to electronic vote fraud this year. The Russians have already demonstrated their willingness to hack US systems in order to help Trump. It's not like anyone has a right to be surprised if Trump wins with 100% of the electronic vote, since we will of course ignore security until it's too late.

      • Which is good. I mean for fucks sake, what kind of third world country is the US when it doesn't even know who's voting and if they're even citizens?

        Some third world countries have tighter voting regulations and higher voter turnout that put the US electoral system to shame.

    • It remains to be seen whether the DHS would actually be the ones administering things. They're able to make the classification, and they'd have the opportunity to take on the actual administration if they so chose, but it's at least as likely that they'd designate/create some new government body to do the actual work for a couple reasons.

      1)Odds are the TSA has left a bad taste in the mouths of the upper brass of the DHS, so they may not be as eager to jump into things as they once might have. Better to
    • At this point, you need international observers. Same as any other country that can't guarantee honest elections on its own.
  • by known_coward_69 ( 4151743 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:49PM (#52646983)
    this is more like DHS wants more funding to get more power. as it is most poll workers are part time because voting is one day a year. sounds like the DHS wants to hire people to sit around most of the year but to make the bosses more powerful.
    • The only people who are sitting around and doing nothing in Washington, D.C., are your elected officials. This country has more pressing problems than renaming post officials and investigating manufactured scandals.
    • It was a bad idea to make voting just one day a year, but I've gotten used to downright despicable actions from the Federalists. They resorted to using really dirty tactics to get us saddled with the Constitution and a federal form of government. Apparently back then it was the Jeffersonions versus the Hamiltonians and evil won because good was naive.
  • Vulnerable (Score:4, Informative)

    by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:49PM (#52646985) Homepage
    I have to say, I'm seriously worried about vulnerabilities in voting machines. The first line of defence, of course, is to make sure all voting machines have a permanent paper record of each vote.
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2016/07/27/by-november-russian-hackers-could-target-voting-machines/
    https://followmyvote.com/us-electoral-process/voting-system-vulnerabilities/
    http://www.npr.org/sections/itsallpolitics/2015/04/16/399986331/hacked-touchscreen-voting-machine-raises-questions-about-election-security
    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      People raising issues about electronic voting go way back further than that. Here is a search on Risks List for Electronic Voting [ncl.ac.uk] (oldest is at the top)

    • by chihowa ( 366380 )

      The first line of defence, of course, is to make sure all voting machines have a permanent paper record of each vote.

      For that to be an effective defense, you also need to make sure that the electronic vote matches the paper vote. Since paper ballots are easily human- and machine-readable and more difficult to discreetly tamper with, what advantage do electronic voting machines bring to the table?

      If hand-counting ballots takes too long for our ADD society, we should standardize on a ballot layout and let many companies offer ballot scanners to speed up the process.

    • Not so many vulnerabilities in pencils and paper [wikipedia.org].

  • Oh, hell yeah! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:50PM (#52646993)
    Not only should voting be considered critical infrastructure, it should be mandatory and a national weekend holiday.
    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      Not only should voting be considered critical infrastructure, it should be mandatory and a national weekend holiday.

      I'm not sure if Americans could cope with compulsory voting (Oh noes the gubmint is forcing my voice to be heard. That's a first amendment violation!!!!).

      However there is a movement to shift voting to the weekend: Why Tuesday? [whytuesday.org]

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

        Link really should be Why Tuesday? [whytuesday.org]

      • Re:Oh, hell yeah! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by BarbaraHudson ( 3785311 ) <barbara.jane.hud ... minus physicist> on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:20PM (#52647245) Journal
        why settle for one day? Just use the advance polls. And get rid of the "registered democrat" or "registered republican" bullshit. If you have valid ID, you vote. Simple.
        • Re:Oh, hell yeah! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @05:09PM (#52647657)

          Party affiliation only matters for states with closed primaries where only those with a stated party affiliation can vote in that party's primary election. Which is sort of reasonable if you accept that political parties are private organizations that can regulate who votes in their primary.

          Of course, there are larger problems with this process -- like why does the state sponsor an election for a private organization's leadership? Why do the winners on the Democratic and Republican side automatically advance to the general election?

          I'd like to see a primary election that was party neutral and where the top 3-4 polling candidates advanced to the general election, regardless of party. In many cases, the runner-up in one party is actually a more desirable candidate than the winning candidate in the other. In districts (municipal all the way to state level), a single party may dominate so thoroughly that there's no good way for a rival bearing the banner of another party to successfully challenge the dominant party, especially if they're forced to adopt unpopular stances of the rival party.

          • That's called proportional or representational voting, and it's how most European countries work, at least for part of their systems. In my state of Oklahoma, our State AG ran unopposed. Seriously, there wasn't a single Democrat who ran against him. In the US we have majority voting, which works out to eventually only having two parties. One winner, one looser, and they just flip back and forth between the two since 51% is all that's needed to win. The fact that the meme "third party" is a thing in the US
        • Valid ID? We're told that's racist and discriminatory! Unfair!
          • Not if you make it free and easy for everyone who is entitled to one to get it. The reason the courts set aside the ID requirement is because minorities are more likely to have problems getting a valid ID - and that includes US citizens of colour.

            Once everyone has equal access to voter ID, then the courts won't object to it, since that was the basis of rejecting voter ID in the first place.

  • by ArtemaOne ( 1300025 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:51PM (#52647001)
    Seems like an organization controlled by the current executive party administration, which has been given extreme anti-liberty wartime powers, and has proven to be incompetent and more inclined to go after intellectual property violations, would be a great organization to control elections. Thumbs up!
  • If it just means (Score:3, Interesting)

    by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @03:52PM (#52647013) Journal

    If it just means one more place for TSA agents to stand around and pat me down, than no thanks.

    I am sure that is all that it means coming from this administration as well. I mean its the DOJ under this admin that has been basically pushing to prevent any voter id laws from staying on the books, and suing an states that try to restrict vote by mail ( a security hole you can drive a truck thru ) at all. They then insist there is not voter fraud ignoring the fact that they have pretty much prevented the implementation of any effective audit mechanisms that might detect it.

    • If it just means one more place for TSA agents to stand around and pat me down, than no thanks.

      Don't forget about the likelihood of being arrested and charged as a "terrorist" if you happen to fire up a network analyzer within 500 yards of the building.

      Yes, this critical infrastructure concept is absolutely loaded with potential abuse.

  • They can designate all they like. The problem, just like how the DHS handles airport security, border security, and every other kind of security that comes under their purview is that they will not have the capability / talent to figure out the problems, create a solution, and propagate it against political stupidity that a real fix requires.

    The model of government today in the US is to outsource every bit of work that needs to be done to contractors who have to get their margins and aren't interested in
    • Re:not happening. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Strider- ( 39683 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:09PM (#52647149)

      Take the choice of election technology, ballot design, and security out of the hands of 5,000 different jurisdictions, and replace it with well-designed, thought-out, and implemented hardware+software that a dedicated, concerned group of experts is responsible for -- that's what this would take. And is impossible.

      Or, you know, do what Canada does. Keep the voting process pencil and paper and count ballots by hand. Canada typically has the results in from a general election within 4 or 5 hours of the polls closing, and recounts rarely change the results by more than one or two ballots. Every ballot is counted at the polling station, and every candidate has the right to have scrutineers present to witness that counting.

      Yes, Canada has 1/10th the population of the US, but on the other hand this is a problem that scales linearly. You have 10x the population, so you have 10x the polling stations, 10x the returning officers, scrutineers, etc... It works, it's reliable, and is pretty resistant to any kind of interference. Any "attack" (in the computational sense) would have to be carried out on a widely distributed basis.

      • by jbr439 ( 214107 )

        ...
        It works, it's reliable, and is pretty resistant to any kind of interference. ...

        But it's just not sexy :-)

        Seriously, I live in Canada and during the last federal election campaign my head almost exploded when I saw that the Liberal party (now the governing party) was promising to seriously look at online voting if elected. Online voting - a problem-ridden solution in search of a problem.

      • Canada generally requires a photo ID to vote, which we in the US know is actually RACIST! So, I think we can ignore any other commonsense measures you may use.

        • by Strider- ( 39683 )

          Until this year, you could show your registration card, a bill with your name on it, your photo ID, or you could swear an oath to Her Majesty and be done with it (the latter took some time).

  • by Dishevel ( 1105119 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:01PM (#52647067)
    They are incompetent and incapable.
  • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:01PM (#52647077)

    Have DARPA hold one of it's challenges for companies to come up with a process and/or system to validate election procedures. Have the Air Force, the NSA and the State Department vet it. Open source the whole thing and make it available to any municipality who wants to use it.

    I'm *not* talking about E-voting, by the way, but the process and/or software used to tabulate votes. It shouldn't matter what method is used to cast the votes. E-Voting could be included in the design, but it should be input agnostic.

  • Absolutely not. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @04:02PM (#52647089) Homepage Journal

    So long as the States elect Presidents, Senators, and Representatives, they are responsible for their election processes.

    To enforce any Federal controls or processes beyond the civil rights of access is an overreach, and time to stop these. Examples of possible DHS overreach I would oppose are:

    - Mandating electronic or paper-based polling.

    - Supervision of vote counting and or a requirement of approval by federal officials of any sort. Court appeals are already conducted, and are tolerable.

    - Federal handling of voting materials.

    We've let the Federal government reach into too much already. If there is a groundswell of concern over federal elections, perhaps they should focus on the most recent Presidential election, and the glaring irregularities seen there. Plenty of work to be done in those limited instances, before usurping state management and control of THEIR OWN ELECTIONS.

  • Hello? You want to let the federal government control the process by which its own executives are chosen? Hasn't anyone ever done any game theory, AT ALL?

  • It is critical but

    The big "but" is what laws would they enforce that are not well served today.

    Voter fraud has yet to be shown to be a real problem.
    Perhaps because all the metrics are measured by German VW engineering services.

    The current laws on computer hacking make the breaches of HC and the DNC servers
    totally illegal. But wait the hackers were from off shore and the US has no jurisdiction.

    Flaws in systems and applications are not getting fixed because TLAs at times see their
    knowledge of flaws a bits o

  • Don't worry guys, DHS will take over all federal elections to make sure that everything is done in accordance with DHS policies. Oh and Jeh Johnson would also like to announce his candidacy for President in the 2020 election cycle.
  • As I understand it diebold systems which are vulnerable to negative vote preloading are still used in the major population centers for voting. So 3 party registered independent verification of wiped and clean state prior to elections both in the general and primaries would be a start.
  • So, we all like to hate the NSA for all of their spying, but they really have a very high level of technical competence, and they are actually quite good at carrying out their mission (or what they perceive their mission to be). If the president were to issue a directive requiring the NSA to treat the integrity of US elections as a national security issue, and ask them to do a thorough evaluation of the systems and processes and to issue recommendations for how to fix or mitigate any perceived problems, I e

  • Nope, nope, nope! (Score:5, Informative)

    by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @05:02PM (#52647605) Journal

    DHS is a big waste of taxpayer dollars as it is. No reason to go giving it more justification to continue to expand.

  • by Gim Tom ( 716904 ) on Thursday August 04, 2016 @05:10PM (#52647673)
    The touch screens we use here are cool, but what is the point? There is no real audit trail and there is no way in hell to really know who or what your vote was counted for. Most of the rush to automated voting has been media driven. There is no requirement for elections to be decided by the morning news, and it is too important to leave something like this to us geeks, and yes I do consider myself one from WAY back. I am holding a copy of Running Wild: The Next Industrial Revolution by a Mr. Adam Osborne. If you don't know who he is look him up. He was one of the founding fathers of microcomputers. In his this book Chapter 7 is titled Powerful Tools or Powerful Weapons . The second sentence in the second paragraph says this, "Nevertheless, computers should be excluded by legislation from three important applications: the tabulation of election results, the transfer of large sums of money between banks, and the central operations of stock exchanges."

    Too late for number two and three, but number one is probably the most important anyway and is by far the most difficult to audit in case of chicanery. WHY do we need computers to vote? What is the rush in getting the totals? My guess is that having real time or near real time election returns is driven mostly by the media and has been from the beginning. Newspapers wanted the scoop (remember Truman vs Dewey?) and the 24 hour cable news channels live for election night so they can "CALL" the election before the polls close.

    Call me a Luddite if you wish but the more people actually involved in the voting process, and especially the counting of votes, the less chance there is that one or a few people can put their thumb on the scale. My vote is to go back to PAPER ballots counted by people from EACH party or person in the election in an open counting room with live coverage. It might take a few days to know who won, but it isn't a ball game, it is an election and knowing who won or lost in record time is not the point. The point is that the vote MUST be honest and counted HONESTLY.

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