"A month after the (March 22, 2016 Utah GOP caucuses) election, it became clear
that nearly a third of the people who tried to vote online were unable
to do so, (Pamela) Smith of Verified Voting said." (3rd parag. from end of article)
May 17, 2016, "More than 30 states offer online voting, but experts warn it isn’t secure," Washington Post, Sari Horwitz
"The popularity of voting online is growing and will be in place for
the presidential election in more than 30 states, primarily for voters
living overseas or serving in the military.
But security experts
and some senior Obama administration officials fear there is not enough
protection for any ballots transmitted over the Internet. They are
warning states that any kind of online voting is not yet secure and most
likely will not be for years to come.
“We believe that online
voting, especially online voting in large scale, introduces great risk
into the election system by threatening voters’ expectations of
confidentiality, accountability and security of their votes and provides
an avenue for malicious actors to manipulate the voting results,” Neil
Jenkins, an official in the Office of Cybersecurity and Communications
at the Department of Homeland Security, said at a conference of the
Election Verification Network this spring.
Thirty-two states have
some form of electronic transmission of ballots over the Internet,
compared with no states with online voting in 2000. In Alaska, for
example, all voters can submit an absentee elections ballot online from
computers in their own homes.
Missouri offers electronic ballots
for members of the military who are serving in a “hostile zone”
overseas. North Dakota permits overseas citizens or military members
deployed overseas to vote online. And in 20 other states and the
District of Columbia, certain voters living abroad will be allowed to
return their absentee ballots via email or fax in the upcoming
presidential election.
Supporters of Internet voting say the advantages are obvious: a more
convenient way to vote that is aligned with modern lifestyles. People
bank, shop, read the newspaper, make travel plans and stay in touch with
friends online. Electronic voting is also seen by supporters as a way
to increase turnout in elections.
But while the convenience of
casting a ballot online is appealing, the potential benefits do not
outweigh the serious security and privacy risks, Jenkins said, adding
that his Homeland Security cyber-division “does not recommend the
adoption of online voting for elections at any level of government at
this time.”
The risks include the manipulation of votes and
election results, which might not be detectable before officials are
sworn into office, and the loss of privacy and the confidentiality of
voting results if they are intercepted or stolen from servers, he said.
Pamela
Smith, president of Verified Voting, a nonprofit organization that
advocates for legislation and regulation to promote accuracy,
transparency and verifiability of elections, said that at first blush,
online voting seems like a good idea to many people.
“Sometimes
jurisdictions that are adapting something like this spin it as ‘this is
very 21st century, this is the modernization of elections,” Smith said.
“But it’s one of those cases where tried and true technology actually
works best for elections. Paper ballots have many advantages. When
something is online, you don’t have that physical record of voter
intent.”
Experts say that states will not be able to protect
themselves from experienced hackers, including foreign countries who
could meddle with a U.S. election. That is one of the reasons that Ron
Rivest, an Internet security expert and professor at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, gives online voting security “a big fat F.”
“The
Chinese are very good at getting into everybody’s systems,” Rivest
said. “They’ve attacked most of the Fortune 500 companies successfully.”
In
Alaska, voters casting their ballots online see a disclaimer from the
state Division of Elections: “When returning the ballot through the
secure online delivery system, you are voluntarily waving [sic] your
right to a secret ballot and are assuming the risk that a faulty
transmission may occur.”
J. Alex Halderman, a University of Michigan professor and director of its Center for Computer Security and Society, cites a pilot project
six years ago in the District where the public was invited to attack a
proposed Internet voting system. Halderman led a team that within 48
hours was able to gain nearly complete control of the server and change
every vote.
“We don’t have the technology to vote online safely,”
said Halderman, who made a video that shows how his hackers were able
to even get inside the security cameras and watch the people running the
D.C. system. “It will be decades more before Internet voting can be
secure.”
Last year, Utah’s lieutenant governor, Spencer J. Cox
(R), oversaw a task force that studied whether Utah should implement
Internet voting. The task force concluded
that despite the advantage of making voting easier and more convenient,
Utah should not use online voting yet because of the security risks.
“An
election requires legitimacy, accuracy, and ballot privacy,” the Utah
report said. “Weak security in any of these areas will attract attention
from those whom have malicious intent. Security compromises among large
corporations give us an example of potential problems, and while these
companies may accept these problems as the cost of doing business, an
election cannot.”
Nevertheless, Utah’s Republican Party decided
to experiment with online voting this spring when Republicans were able
to vote electronically for the first time in the Utah caucuses in March.
But along with the security and privacy concerns of security experts, Utah voters had many technical problems.
Some
frustrated voters tried eight or nine times unsuccessfully to get on to
the system; others clicked to vote for a candidate but were sent to
another website. Some thought they were approved to vote online, but
weren’t. Thousands had lost the 30-digit personal identification number
required to vote that had been mailed to them, or it had been deleted or
caught up in spam.
A month after the election [held on March 22], it became clear
that nearly a third of the people who tried to vote online were unable
to do so, Smith of Verified Voting said.
But James Evans, the chairman of the Republican Party in Utah who led the effort to allow Utah residents to vote online, has called it a success.
“We
are proud to have taken a leading role in election modernization,”
Evans said in a statement after the election. “By offering online
voting, we expanded the number of options citizens have to participate
and made voting as convenient as possible. Technology proved key in
engaging citizens and bolstering democracy.”"
.................
After all that: Utah Republicans now on board with Trump:
May 16, 2016, "Trump now leading Clinton, Sanders in Utah, new poll shows," ksl.com, Dennis Ramboy
"In March, a poll showed Utah would vote for a Democrat for president for the first time in 52 years.
But now that Trump has forced fellow Republicans Ted Cruz and John
Kasich out of the race, and influential party leaders are backing the
presumptive GOP nominee, Utahns appear to be falling in line.
"I think the reason that they lined up for Hillary before or Bernie was
because of what Mitt Romney did to Mr. Trump," Jones said, referring to a
scathing speech the 2012 GOP presidential nominee made about Trump in
March.
While Romney has not let up on his denunciation of Trump, other
Republicans, including Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, say the will do what
they can to help the billionaire businessman win in November.
"Orrin Hatch is very powerful in Washington, D.C., he really is, and
very respected. When he speaks out, it has impact, and it sometimes
filters on down in Utah," Jones said."...
....................
George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Utah GOP March 22, 2016 caucuses found to have flopped a month after results were announced. Nearly a third of those who tried to vote in new online system were unable to do so. Alaska voters can vote online but must agree 'faulty transmission may occur.' Errors may not be found until after wrong person is sworn into office-Washington Post
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- susan
- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
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