Computer hackers attending DEF CON over the weekend in Las Vegas demonstrated that the voting machines used in U.S. elections are vulnerable to hacking, although no fix will be made before the 2024 presidential election in November.
“And just like every year since the Voting Village began almost a decade ago, attendees found problems,” Politico said Monday. “Organizers of the Voting Village intend to put out a full report in the coming weeks detailing the vulnerability findings from this cycle, and according to Voting Village co-founder Harri Hursti, these vulnerabilities ran “multiple pages” as of Saturday afternoon. While Hursti would not comment on the exact problems found, the amount was fairly consistent with previous years.”
Alex Jones exposed voting machine vulnerabilities in 2002.
While vulnerabilities in the computerized voting machines are found year after year, little is being done about it.
“Voting Village organizers are frustrated that, despite years of security findings, voting machines vendors aren’t moving more quickly to make fixes. ‘There’s so much basic stuff that should be happening and is not happening, so yes I’m worried about things not being fixed, but they haven’t been fixed for a long time, and I’m also angry about it,’ Hursti said during a break in the day,” Politico said Monday.
In 2008 Alex Jones interviewed Bev Harris, founder of Black Box Voting, about the ‘hackability’ of U.S. voting machines.
Harris is still battling against the vote fraud industrial complex.
The revelation that the voting machines used in U.S. elections are not secure is not a recent one.
In 2017 a team at DEF CON demonstrated that it takes only 90 minutes to hack into the machine and vote remotely.
In 2019 it was also reported that DEF CON hackers demonstrated the voting machines can be successfully targeted as well as that voting machine companies have a hostile relationship with the white-hat hackers, leaving the hacker teams resorting to buying the voting machines on eBay.
The fact that buying these machines is something anyone could do is troubling, as black-hat hackers could potentially buy them to find out their vulnerabilities in order to exploit them during a real election, unlike the DEF CON teams which hack the machines at the conference in order to try and get the voting machine companies to fix their products.
NBC News technology correspondent Jacob Ward even reported that many of these voting machines are connected to the internet, yet there exists no political momentum to correct that, something referred to by Ward as ‘extremely alarming’.
Unfortunately voting machine vulnerabilities didn’t end in 2019.
“In 2023, University of Michigan Professor of Computer Science and Engineering J. Halderman, revealed in a Georgia courtroom that Dominion Voting Systems were vulnerable to hacks. His report confirmed that votes can be altered in the Dominion voting machines. In fact, the report reveals that the Dominion software is vulnerable and can be hacked,” The Gateway Pundit said Wednesday.
The Gateway Pundit reported in January that Halderman was able to hack into one brand of voting machine to change the vote totals using only a pen.
Despite the voting machine’s numerous vulnerabilities, some are pushing to vote from smartphones.
Infowars recently reported how one voting machine company’s President and two executives were indicted on bribery and money laundering charges.
Fake Elections, Fake Politicians, Real Demons
It turns out that these machines have been hackable since the beginning and nothing has ever changed.
Computer hackers attending DEF CON over the weekend in Las Vegas demonstrated that the voting machines used in U.S. elections are vulnerable to hacking, although no fix will be made before the 2024 presidential election in November.
“And just like every year since the Voting Village began almost a decade ago, attendees found problems,” Politico said Monday. “Organizers of the Voting Village intend to put out a full report in the coming weeks detailing the vulnerability findings from this cycle, and according to Voting Village co-founder Harri Hursti, these vulnerabilities ran “multiple pages” as of Saturday afternoon. While Hursti would not comment on the exact problems found, the amount was fairly consistent with previous years.”
Alex Jones exposed voting machine vulnerabilities in 2002.
While vulnerabilities in the computerized voting machines are found year after year, little is being done about it.
“Voting Village organizers are frustrated that, despite years of security findings, voting machines vendors aren’t moving more quickly to make fixes. ‘There’s so much basic stuff that should be happening and is not happening, so yes I’m worried about things not being fixed, but they haven’t been fixed for a long time, and I’m also angry about it,’ Hursti said during a break in the day,” Politico said Monday.
In 2008 Alex Jones interviewed Bev Harris, founder of Black Box Voting, about the ‘hackability’ of U.S. voting machines.
Harris is still battling against the vote fraud industrial complex.
The revelation that the voting machines used in U.S. elections are not secure is not a recent one.
In 2017 a team at DEF CON demonstrated that it takes only 90 minutes to hack into the machine and vote remotely.
In 2019 it was also reported that DEF CON hackers demonstrated the voting machines can be successfully targeted as well as that voting machine companies have a hostile relationship with the white-hat hackers, leaving the hacker teams resorting to buying the voting machines on eBay.
The fact that buying these machines is something anyone could do is troubling, as black-hat hackers could potentially buy them to find out their vulnerabilities in order to exploit them during a real election, unlike the DEF CON teams which hack the machines at the conference in order to try and get the voting machine companies to fix their products.
NBC News technology correspondent Jacob Ward even reported that many of these voting machines are connected to the internet, yet there exists no political momentum to correct that, something referred to by Ward as ‘extremely alarming’.
Unfortunately voting machine vulnerabilities didn’t end in 2019.
“In 2023, University of Michigan Professor of Computer Science and Engineering J. Halderman, revealed in a Georgia courtroom that Dominion Voting Systems were vulnerable to hacks. His report confirmed that votes can be altered in the Dominion voting machines. In fact, the report reveals that the Dominion software is vulnerable and can be hacked,” The Gateway Pundit said Wednesday.
The Gateway Pundit reported in January that Halderman was able to hack into one brand of voting machine to change the vote totals using only a pen.
Despite the voting machine’s numerous vulnerabilities, some are pushing to vote from smartphones.
Infowars recently reported how one voting machine company’s President and two executives were indicted on bribery and money laundering charges.
Fake Elections, Fake Politicians, Real Demons
https://www.infowars.com/posts/us-voting-machines-proven-hackable-at-conference2024-08-14T09:37:08.000Z2024-08-14T09:37:08.000Z