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2016年:選挙改ざんの年?



The 2016 U.S. election is roiled by fears over election tampering and cyber-warfare. While such anxiety threatens to undermine confidence in the results, the up-side is that for the first time since 2000, the election is generating thoughtful discussion on the intersection of cyber-security and voting.
After the high-profile hack of the Democratic National Committee, and after attacks on voter registration databases in 20 states, these fears are certainly justified. After all, we live in a new era of threat, where foreign powers don’t hesitate to use cyber-tools for economic and political gain. The White House has now formally blamed Russia for the DNC hack, but they’re hardly the only nation-state willing to engage in cloak-and-dagger cyber-warfare.
Further complicating matters is that our voting machines are in desperate need of an overhaul. In 2006, computer scientists proved that in less than a minute, an e-voting machine could be hacked and installed with vote-changing malware, and it can even be done remotely. But intentional manipulation may not even be our biggest concern — in 2004, North Carolina lost 4,438 votes because of a system error.
If you’re thinking paper ballots are the answer, I don’t blame you. Most states would agree: only five states currently use digital voting alone, and 75 percent of all voting is done on paper ballots.
But after the 2000 election, when the infamous ‘hanging chads’ forced millions of votes to be invalidated, it became clear that paper ballots are not only cumbersome, but inaccurate. Two years later, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act and introduced digitized voting and registration databases across America. Unfortunately, the new machines were plagued with errors, and many of them are still in use today.
Growing concern over election tampering prompted 33 state election agencies to petition the Department of Homeland Security for aid. The DHS responded by offering “cyber hygiene scans on Internet-facing systems as well as risk and vulnerability assessments.”
This is a good start, but hardly a long-term solution. Cyber-security for the future has to go beyond one-off scans and retrospective assessments. The answer has to involve intelligently monitoring and analyzing millions of devices — from voting machines to vulnerable IoT devices — in order to mitigate risk from unknown threats. Whether it be a state-sponsored hack or tampering from a politically motivated insider, the integrity of our elections is at stake, and its security deserves the utmost attention.
To hear more of my thoughts on the modern threat landscape, sign up for my webinar on November 9.