A scientist’s quest for an accessible, unhackable voting machine

After 19 years of work, Juan Gilbert says he has invented the most secure voting machine.

Juan Gilbert demonstrates his transparent voting machine, which he says is a breakthrough in election security.

Enlarge / Juan Gilbert demonstrates his transparent voting machine, which he says is a breakthrough in election security. (credit: Lawren Simmons for Undark)

In late 2020, a large box arrived at Juan Gilbert’s office at the University of Florida. The computer science professor had been looking for this kind of product for months. Previous orders had yielded poor results. This time, though, he was optimistic.

Gilbert drove the package home. Inside was a transparent box, built by a French company and equipped with a 27-inch touchscreen. Almost immediately, Gilbert began modifying it. He put a printer inside and connected the device to Prime III, the voting system he has been building since the first term of the George W. Bush administration.

After 19 years of building, tinkering, and testing, he told Undark this spring, he had finally invented “the most secure voting technology ever created.”

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3. Staffel Lower Decks angeschaut: Lower Decks bleibt ein Fest für Trekkies

In der dritten Staffel von Lower Decks zeigen die Macher wieder, wie Star-Trek-Nostalgie funktioniert – inklusive Gaststars und einem grandiosen Finale. Achtung, Spoiler! Eine Rezension von Tobias Költzsch (Star Trek, Streaming)

In der dritten Staffel von Lower Decks zeigen die Macher wieder, wie Star-Trek-Nostalgie funktioniert - inklusive Gaststars und einem grandiosen Finale. Achtung, Spoiler! Eine Rezension von Tobias Költzsch (Star Trek, Streaming)

Meet the Windows servers that have been fueling massive DDoSes for months

Misconfigured CLDAP services on MS domain controllers are amplifying data floods.

Meet the Windows servers that have been fueling massive DDoSes for months

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty)

A small retail business in North Africa, a North American telecommunications provider, and two separate religious organizations: What do they have in common? They’re all running poorly configured Microsoft servers that for months or years have been spraying the Internet with gigabytes-per-second of junk data in distributed-denial-of-service attacks designed to disrupt or completely take down websites and services.

In all, recently published research from Black Lotus Labs, the research arm of networking and application technology company Lumen, identified more than 12,000 servers—all running Microsoft domain controllers hosting the company’s Active Directory services—that were regularly used to magnify the size of distributed-denial-of-service attacks, or DDoSes.

A never-ending arms race

For decades, DDoSers have battled with defenders in a constant, never-ending arms race. Early on, DDoSers simply corralled ever-larger numbers of Internet-connected devices into botnets and then used them to simultaneously send a target more data than they can handle. Targets—be they game companies, journalists, or even crucial pillars of Internet infrastructure—often buckled at the strain and either completely fell over or slowed to a trickle.

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Diese Steinmeier-Rede war ein Flopp: nach außen und nach innen

Themen des Tages: Wie die einsamen Rufe des Bundespräsidenten in der Krise verschallen. Wie die ARD “Westsplaining” betreibt. Und wie die Inflation in die Höhe schnellt.

Themen des Tages: Wie die einsamen Rufe des Bundespräsidenten in der Krise verschallen. Wie die ARD "Westsplaining" betreibt. Und wie die Inflation in die Höhe schnellt.

Übernahme von Twitter: Musk stellt die Klassenfrage

Der Milliardär Elon Musk kauft Twitter, mehrere Politiker haben die Plattform bereits verlassen. Beides kann sich nicht jeder leisten – und das ist gefährlich. Ein IMHO von Lennart Mühlenmeier (Twitter, Microblogging)

Der Milliardär Elon Musk kauft Twitter, mehrere Politiker haben die Plattform bereits verlassen. Beides kann sich nicht jeder leisten - und das ist gefährlich. Ein IMHO von Lennart Mühlenmeier (Twitter, Microblogging)

Wie Ostdeutsche zu Kranken erklärt werden

Mediensplitter (11): Über die Rationalisierung der Russland-Feindschaft und die Delegitimierung der USA-Kritik im öffentlich-rechtlichen Fernsehen. Ein Kommentar.

Mediensplitter (11): Über die Rationalisierung der Russland-Feindschaft und die Delegitimierung der USA-Kritik im öffentlich-rechtlichen Fernsehen. Ein Kommentar.