Published on July 1st, 2019 📆 | 4946 Views ⚑
0Tulsi Gabbard Says a Teen Hacked a Replica of Florida’s Election System. She’s Wrong
The spectre of Russian hacking and election interference is very much a presence in the lead up to the 2020 presidential elections. And Hawaii Rep. and presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard has been one of the more outspoken candidates when it comes to that danger.
On Friday, Gabbard went on HBO's Real Time with Bill Maher and sounded the alarm once again.
âWe have to take seriously the security of our elections because of the vulnerabilities that existâstill nowâthat really have the ability to undermine our democracy,â Gabbard said.
She then said that America's election security is in such a vulnerable state that a teenage hacker managed to compromise a âreplicaâ of Florida's election system.
âThereâs a hacking conference thatâs held every year in Las Vegas where I think a 14 or 15-year old-girl from Florida hacked into a replica of Floridaâs election system in less than 15 minutes,â she said.
This talking point gets people's attention about election security, but it's also factually wrong. A teenager did not hack a replica of Florida's election system.
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Gabbard was talking about the Def Con hacking conference, and specifically about an event held last year: a hacking competition for young hackers where organizers set up look-alikes of election websites and asked the participants to hack them. Organizers gave participants âclonesâ of state election websites with vulnerabilities inserted by the organizers. In particular, the sites were designed to be vulnerable to SQL injection attacks, one of the most ancientâand yet still very commonâhacks ever.
Moreover, in the real world, these election websites donât actually tabulate votes. Hacking one of these websites on election day could theoretically cause some temporary confusion, but it will not change the results of an election. These were not the real elections systems deployed in Florida or anywhere else in the country. These were systems intentionally made more vulnerable in an attempt to help participants crack the competition. But this hasnât stopped anyone from taking it too seriously, and misjudge the competitionâs significance. Unfortunately several media outlets such as TIME magazine, ran with exaggerated and misleading headlines spreading disinformation that Gabbard is now helping spread even more.
Last Friday wasnât the first time Gabbard wrongly stated that teenager hacked a replica of Florida's election system. In September of last year during the Joe Rogan podcast, Gabbard made the same point referencing the Def Con competition, again without realizing that it was just a simulation, and its results shouldnât necessarily be taken as an indictment of real elections systems.
Itâs great that some candidates are taking election hacking as a serious issue. But if candidates like Gabbard want to champion this issue and take it seriously, they need to get their facts right.
As Motherboard contributor Kim Zetter has reported for years, voting machines and computer systems used in the election have serious vulnerabilities that should be addressed before itâs too late, but mischaracterizing the nature and results of a Def Con event will not help the case.
Gabbardâs presidential campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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