When it comes to securing the vote,Melodrama Archives officials keep pushing for the latest and supposedly greatest in election technology. According to cryptography experts at the annual RSA conference in San Francisco, that approach might just do more harm than good.
In fact, one warned, when it comes to elections, depending on technology can be "dangerous." Thankfully, ahead of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, we already have a good (if not perfect) toolset to secure the vote — we just have to choose to use it.
Speaking to a crowd of security industry professionals in the main hall of San Francisco's Moscone Center Tuesday morning, RSA Data Security founder and current MIT professor Ronald Rivest criticized voting tech like the now infamous Iowa Caucus app.
"Voting is a place where you don't need high tech to make it work," he explained. "You can get by just fine with paper ballots, and if you can keep that as your foundation — and if you do use the technology, use the paper ballots to check on it — you can do very well."
"Garbage in, garbage stored forever."
This argument, that paper ballots are a strong method to ensure the integrity of the vote, is not new. Experts like Georgetown's Matt Blaze have long made that point, while at the same time cautioning that paper ballots are "only a tiny part of a very complex problem space, and even that has notoriously difficult tradeoffs associated with it."
In other words: Yes, paper ballots are important, but they're only one important part of a complicated whole.
Rivest spoke about how technology can be used as an auditing tool, and thus contribute to a more secure and accurate vote tally. However, he cautioned, when you start down the path of "software dependence" — that is, your trust of the results is based on how much you trust a piece of software — "that's a dangerous path to go down."
"Putting a foundation of trust on electronic components that are hackable," added Rivest, "is just not the right way to go."
Rivest and his co-panelists were also quick to tamp down any lingering interest in blockchain voting. The talk of the town as recently as 2018, the promise of using the blockchain to secure the vote has fully lost its shine.
"Blockchain is the wrong security technology for voting," insisted Rivest. "I like to think of it as bringing a combination lock to a kitchen fire or something like that."
He wasn't the only one who felt that way. "Most of the use cases that have been proposed are nonsense in my opinion," Adi Shamir, a computer science professor at the Weizmann Institute, told the crowd.
SEE ALSO: Verizon drops out of RSA cybersecurity event over coronavirus fears, following AT&T and IBM
"Garbage in," emphasized Rivest of blockchain voting, "garbage stored forever."
Hopefully, those who set the nation's election security policies and priorities are listening. If not, come election time we just may end up with a hot mess of stored garbage.
Topics Cybersecurity
13 feminists who play the Twitter game to winZombie Javier Bardem is NOT happy in the new 'Pirates' trailerFox News celebrates Trump's weekend White House stay, except he was golfingMeet the woman behind 'Feud's' most fascinating character10 things named after Sir David AttenboroughSean Hannity is so very sad that Ted Koppel thinks he's bad for America'Pretty Little Liars' series finale will have a 'huge twist'These scientists turned spinach leaves into beating heart tissueThis app is absolutely exploding right now and it's all because of SnapchatSit back, relax and enjoy some Hillary ClintonLittle hedgehog rolls off a pink pillow to save your MondayYou soon won't need a card to withdraw cash at this shady bank's ATMsChance the Rapper sat in on a third grade math class and it looked really fun, TBHAlex Jones got relentlessly mocked after this tweet about the Queen'The Art of the Deal' gets a new chapter on Twitter after TrumpCare collapsesPossibly evil mass death of zoo snakes leads to investigationTom Hardy reads another bedtime story, breaks the internet againJ.K. Rowling shares touching Mother's Day message, comforts fansWomen stand together in London to honour Westminster attack victimsJohn Legend just had a very dramatic airport experience Star Wars Celebration 2023: What we learned about the new Daisey Ridley Create a recipe book on Instagram by saving posts to collections Why you need to watch 'Beef' on Netflix: Steven Yeun and Ali Wong are electric 10 times 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie' made me scream with delight — or cringe The Obamas, Beyoncé, and more will speak at YouTube's virtual graduation ceremony Kid's viral song about buttholes is honestly a bop 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 10 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 5 'The Simpsons' came eerily close to predicting the coronavirus and murder hornets Secrets fans learned about 'Ahsoka' if they were at the Star Wars Celebration 2023 panel 'Wordle' today: Here's the answer, hints for April 9 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 6 Michigan senator denies wearing face mask made from Confederate flag 15 best celebrity graduation speeches to watch online Grim Reaper appears on local news to protest beach openings Veteran receives 135,000 birthday cards after raising millions for healthcare workers Zoom from a BDSM dungeon with these kinky new backgrounds Netflix's 'Beef': Steven Yeun breaks down his emotional church scene 'Wordle' today: Here's the answer, hints for April 6 Netflix's 'Chupa' review: Vampiric mythical beast gets the Spielberg treatment
3.5337s , 8225.6171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Melodrama Archives】,Pursuit Information Network