Forwarded from Midnight Rider Channel 🇺🇸 (Karli Bonne)
Written by Benjamin Freed
Jun 8, 2020 | STATESCOOP
An online voting platform that a handful of states are using in limited capacities this year has been found to be vulnerable to hacking that could expose or manipulate how a person’s ballot was cast without being detected either by voters or officials tallying results, according to a paper published Sunday by a pair of influential election-security experts.
The platform, OmniBallot, is scheduled to be offered by the states of Delaware and West Virginia as an option for active-duty military members, other overseas residents and voters with physical disabilities — and, in the case of Delaware, voters who are self-quarantining due to COVID-19. It was also used last month in local elections in New Jersey, though the Garden State does not plan to use the platform in its presidential primary next month.
According to the paper, by J. Alex Halderman, a computer scientist at the University of Michigan, and Michael Specter, a doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, OmniBallot “is vulnerable to vote manipulation by malware on the voter’s device and by insiders or other attackers” who can compromise systems made by Amazon, Google, Cloudflare or OmniBallot’s publisher, Democracy Live.
Halderman and Specter also wrote that OmniBallot “appears to have no privacy policy,” a concern given that it collects several pieces of a voter’s identity that could be sold to advertisers.
Unlike other mobile voting options, such as Voatz — a mobile app that was previously used in West Virginia — voters using OmniBallot can return their votes to their local election authorities several ways, including printing them out and mailing, emailing or faxing them.
Democracy Live’s OmniBallot platform has long been used to collect votes from service members, who print out blank ballots, fill them out and return them through postal mail. But 2020 is the first year the platform will include an online ballot return — and will be opened to a wider universe of voters.
The paper cites a memo last month from the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency that delivered a stern warning about the perils of online voting. Online voting, the memo read, “faces significant security risks to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of voted ballots.”
The CISA memo, which was also signed by the FBI, Election Assistance Commission and National Institute of Standards and Technology also said that even with the best cybersecurity practices in place, paper balloting is still far less risky than electronic voting.
“[W]e recommend paper ballot returns as electronic ballot return technologies are high-risk even with controls in place,” the agencies said at the time.
Jun 8, 2020 | STATESCOOP
An online voting platform that a handful of states are using in limited capacities this year has been found to be vulnerable to hacking that could expose or manipulate how a person’s ballot was cast without being detected either by voters or officials tallying results, according to a paper published Sunday by a pair of influential election-security experts.
The platform, OmniBallot, is scheduled to be offered by the states of Delaware and West Virginia as an option for active-duty military members, other overseas residents and voters with physical disabilities — and, in the case of Delaware, voters who are self-quarantining due to COVID-19. It was also used last month in local elections in New Jersey, though the Garden State does not plan to use the platform in its presidential primary next month.
According to the paper, by J. Alex Halderman, a computer scientist at the University of Michigan, and Michael Specter, a doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, OmniBallot “is vulnerable to vote manipulation by malware on the voter’s device and by insiders or other attackers” who can compromise systems made by Amazon, Google, Cloudflare or OmniBallot’s publisher, Democracy Live.
Halderman and Specter also wrote that OmniBallot “appears to have no privacy policy,” a concern given that it collects several pieces of a voter’s identity that could be sold to advertisers.
Unlike other mobile voting options, such as Voatz — a mobile app that was previously used in West Virginia — voters using OmniBallot can return their votes to their local election authorities several ways, including printing them out and mailing, emailing or faxing them.
Democracy Live’s OmniBallot platform has long been used to collect votes from service members, who print out blank ballots, fill them out and return them through postal mail. But 2020 is the first year the platform will include an online ballot return — and will be opened to a wider universe of voters.
The paper cites a memo last month from the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency that delivered a stern warning about the perils of online voting. Online voting, the memo read, “faces significant security risks to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of voted ballots.”
The CISA memo, which was also signed by the FBI, Election Assistance Commission and National Institute of Standards and Technology also said that even with the best cybersecurity practices in place, paper balloting is still far less risky than electronic voting.
“[W]e recommend paper ballot returns as electronic ballot return technologies are high-risk even with controls in place,” the agencies said at the time.
StateScoop
Benjamin Freed Archives
Benjamin Freed was the managing editor of StateScoop and EdScoop, covering cybersecurity issues affecting state and local governments across the country. He wrote extensively about ransomware, election security and the federal government’s role in assisting…
Forwarded from Jack Posobiec
The Turkenschanz, at the foot of Khalenburg Mountain
The site of the Battle of Vienna, 1683 where the Polish Hussars smashed the Ottoman Empire and saved Christendom
The site of the Battle of Vienna, 1683 where the Polish Hussars smashed the Ottoman Empire and saved Christendom
👍2
Forwarded from New Mexico Audit Force (Erin Clements)
Back to Draza's amazing reveal about Rhode Island from earlier in the day.
She is showing how when you plot the total votes for each candidate as they were accumulating on TV on election night, you'll notice that Trump was in the lead all night, then there was a massive injection of Biden votes at the end - just like we saw in MI, PA, GA, etc.
You can make the same plot for the votes as they're stored in the state's Election Management System (EMS). But in the EMS record you'll notice that the Biden votes that were really injected at the end of counting are now spread out so it doesn't look like there was a massive Biden ballot dump.
If elections were honestly counted, reported, and recorded, then the two plots would have the same shape. But they don't.
Dominion software shuffles stuffed votes into the record to spread them out and make them look natural. So if anyone checks later, it won't look like obvious ballot stuffing.
She is showing how when you plot the total votes for each candidate as they were accumulating on TV on election night, you'll notice that Trump was in the lead all night, then there was a massive injection of Biden votes at the end - just like we saw in MI, PA, GA, etc.
You can make the same plot for the votes as they're stored in the state's Election Management System (EMS). But in the EMS record you'll notice that the Biden votes that were really injected at the end of counting are now spread out so it doesn't look like there was a massive Biden ballot dump.
If elections were honestly counted, reported, and recorded, then the two plots would have the same shape. But they don't.
Dominion software shuffles stuffed votes into the record to spread them out and make them look natural. So if anyone checks later, it won't look like obvious ballot stuffing.
👍4
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Media is too big
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Pfizer Whistleblower Attorney Says Pfizer Admitted Their Vaccine Was a 'Prototype' in Court Filings 🚨
https://rumble.com/v15lv57-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizer-admitted-their-vaccine-was-a-prot.html
@ChiefNerd
https://rumble.com/v15lv57-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizer-admitted-their-vaccine-was-a-prot.html
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Qtime Network 🇺🇸🇳🇱
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"MonkeyPox? No. Its called Shingles and its a known "adverse reaction" to the covid jab... They even tried to use a picture of Shingles and call it MonkeyPox"
@QtimeNetwork
@QtimeNetwork
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
JUST IN — Pfizer has asked a U.S. court to throw out a lawsuit from whistleblower Brook Jackson because their vaccine contract with the DoD satisfied the ‘prototype’ provision
“In its motion to dismiss, Pfizer says the regulations don’t apply to its vaccine contract with the U.S. Department of Defense because the agreement was executed under the department’s Other Transaction Authority (OTA), which gives contract holders the ability to skirt many rules and laws that typically apply to contracts.
The contract was granted under the ‘prototype’ provision, which falls under the OTA. The rules for prototypes state that just one of four conditions must be satisfied. The condition that was satisfied in the Pfizer contract was the involvement of a ‘nontraditional defense contractor.’”
https://m.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/pfizer-moves-to-dismiss-lawsuit-from-covid-19-vaccine-trial-citing-prototype-agreement_4481422.html
@ChiefNerd
“In its motion to dismiss, Pfizer says the regulations don’t apply to its vaccine contract with the U.S. Department of Defense because the agreement was executed under the department’s Other Transaction Authority (OTA), which gives contract holders the ability to skirt many rules and laws that typically apply to contracts.
The contract was granted under the ‘prototype’ provision, which falls under the OTA. The rules for prototypes state that just one of four conditions must be satisfied. The condition that was satisfied in the Pfizer contract was the involvement of a ‘nontraditional defense contractor.’”
https://m.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/pfizer-moves-to-dismiss-lawsuit-from-covid-19-vaccine-trial-citing-prototype-agreement_4481422.html
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Remember when calling this ‘vaccine’ experimental was considered misinformation? Well now Pfizer admits it was a ‘prototype’.
Another conspiracy theory comes true…
@ChiefNerd
Another conspiracy theory comes true…
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Media is too big
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Pfizer Whistleblower Attorney Says Pfizer Admitted Their Vaccine Was a 'Prototype' in Court Filings 🚨
https://rumble.com/v15lv57-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizer-admitted-their-vaccine-was-a-prot.html
@ChiefNerd
https://rumble.com/v15lv57-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizer-admitted-their-vaccine-was-a-prot.html
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Media is too big
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Pfizer Whistleblower Attorney Says Pfizer's Manufacturing Process Leads to mRNA Inconsistencies 👀
https://rumble.com/v15lwg5-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizers-manufacturing-process-leads-to-m.html
@ChiefNerd
https://rumble.com/v15lwg5-pfizer-whistleblower-attorney-says-pfizers-manufacturing-process-leads-to-m.html
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from TheStormHasArrived17 (TheStormHasArrived17 ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️)
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
THEY NEVER THOUGHT SHE WOULD LOSE.
“I’m quite sure the reason they ran with that story is they were so confident Mrs. Clinton was going to win the election, they thought she’d be elected and then we’d never hear about Trump & Russia again.
It only got revived after the election because Trump won.”
“I’m quite sure the reason they ran with that story is they were so confident Mrs. Clinton was going to win the election, they thought she’d be elected and then we’d never hear about Trump & Russia again.
It only got revived after the election because Trump won.”
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Pfizer's contract for the COVID-19 "vaccines" was through the U.S. Army and DoD to support the mission of providing "U.S. military forces and the nation safe, effective, and innovative medical solutions to counter Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Threats"
Does this mean COVID-19 was viewed as an attack on our nation? Would this make President Trump a wartime president? 🧐
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22028603-pfizer-base-agreement
@ChiefNerd
Does this mean COVID-19 was viewed as an attack on our nation? Would this make President Trump a wartime president? 🧐
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22028603-pfizer-base-agreement
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Chief Nerd
Media is too big
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Sky News Australia Says Biden’s New Press Secretary “Struggles to Answer a Question Coherently”
The world is laughing at us. 😤
https://rumble.com/v15nkyr-sky-news-australia-says-bidens-new-press-secretary-struggles-to-answer-a-qu.html
@ChiefNerd
The world is laughing at us. 😤
https://rumble.com/v15nkyr-sky-news-australia-says-bidens-new-press-secretary-struggles-to-answer-a-qu.html
@ChiefNerd
Forwarded from Dinesh D’Souza
This was completely uncalled for.
https://dcenquirer.com/failed-dem-presidential-candidate/?utm_source=89381
https://dcenquirer.com/failed-dem-presidential-candidate/?utm_source=89381
DC Enquirer
Failed Democrat Presidential Candidate Advocates Deporting Head of Fox News - DC Enquirer
Democrat Howard Dean is famous for many things. Almost none of those things are good. You might remember him from the 2004 Presidential Election. Before
Forwarded from TruthHammer 🙏🇺🇸 (DM's & Channel Spam are FAKERS.) (TruthHammer888)
Forwarded from BrittRepublican
Forwarded from Qtime Network 🇺🇸🇳🇱
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"MonkeyPox? No. Its called Shingles and its a known "adverse reaction" to the covid jab... They even tried to use a picture of Shingles and call it MonkeyPox"
@QtimeNetwork
@QtimeNetwork