Anonymous ID: b8c72c Nov. 12, 2018, 6:15 a.m. No.3865796   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/docs/pacei-ken-block-presentation.pdf

 

Data mining for Potential Voter Fraud - Findings and Recommendations (No date ??)

 

“Does voter fraud exist?

Most studies don’t look for fraud

No government agency is looking for voter fraud

Getting data from all 50 states is very difficult

If you do not search for it, you will not find it”

 

The variability in access, quality, cost and data provided impedes the ability to

examine voter activity between states.

 

Roughly 2,200 duplicate voters cast a ballot in the 2016 presidential election in Florida, four times

Bush’s margin of victory in 2000.

 

30.7% of 2016 votes in Rhode Island were cast by voters with no identifying information in voter registration database.

Anonymous ID: b8c72c Nov. 12, 2018, 6:18 a.m. No.3865827   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/security-experts-say-georgia-s-voter-database-vulnerable-hackers-n931266

 

Nov. 5, 2018 / 2:51 PM GMT+1

By Associated Press

ATLANTA — Georgia's online voter database morphed into a last-minute curveball in one of the nation's hottest governor's races, with Republican nominee Brian Kemp making a hacking allegation against Democrats just as reports emerged of a gaping vulnerability in a system that Kemp controls as secretary of state.

 

An attorney for election-security advocates suing Kemp in his role as Georgia's chief elections officer notified the FBI and Kemp's office on Saturday that a private citizen alerted him to what could be a major flaw in the database used to check in voters at the polls. Independent computer scientists told The Associated Press that it enables anyone with access to an individual voter's personal information to alter that voter's record.

 

In response, Kemp asked the FBI on Sunday to investigate the Democratic Party for trying to hack the system.

 

"While we cannot comment on the specifics of an ongoing investigation, I can confirm that the Democratic Party of Georgia is under investigation for possible cybercrimes," said Candice Broce, who works for Kemp.

 

University of Michigan computer scientist Matthew Bernhard, told the AP that anyone with access to an individual voter's personal information could alter that voter's record in the system.

 

Another computer security professional who reviewed the vulnerability — without attempting to probe it for fear of prosecution — is Kris Constable of PrivaSecTech in Vancouver, Canada. "Anyone with security chops would have detected this problem," he said, "so (the system) clearly has never been audited by any computer security professional.”

 

The accusation is not the first from Kemp accusing outsiders of trying to penetrate his office. Immediately after the 2016 general election, Kemp declared that DHS tried to hack his office's network, an accusation dismissed as unfounded in mid-2017 by the DHS inspector general.