U.S. cyber agency says no credible threat to midterm vote despite
websites going down
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[November 09, 2022] By
Zeba Siddiqui
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -The top American
cybersecurity agency said on Tuesday it was helping to fix problems with
some state websites that were hit by cyberattacks during the U.S.
midterm election, but it saw no credible threats aimed at disrupting the
voting infrastructure.
"There is no specific or credible threat that is disrupting election
infrastructure," a senior official at the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) told reporters.
Election security has emerged as a key issue in the United States ever
since officials found Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election with a campaign of hacking and propaganda intended to hurt
Hillary Clinton's chances of winning against Donald Trump.
The "D-DOS" attacks that hit multiple state websites on Tuesday render a
website temporarily inaccessible by flooding it with inauthentic
internet traffic. Such attacks, however, do not affect the casting or
counting of ballots, the senior federal official said in a briefing to
journalists on condition of anonymity.
"We are aware of possible D-DOS attacks affecting a number of websites
for state election offices, campaigns, and partisan organizations," said
the official.
"It’s critical to remember that even a successful D-DOS attack does not
affect a user’s ability to cast a ballot or have it counted. It only
affects the website, so any potential D-DOS attacks should not cast
doubt on the security and resilience of the election."
The official said a "handful" of states had been impacted and their
websites were restored "relatively quickly."
"While attribution is inherently difficult, we have not seen any
evidence to suggest that these are part of a widespread coordinated
campaign," the official said.
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A voter enters a polling station to cast
her ballot in the 2022 U.S. midterm election in dowtown Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania, U.S., November 8, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Segar
The office of the county clerk of Champaign, Illinois, said earlier
in the day their website had been the target of such attacks for a
month, although none had been successful. "No data or information
has been compromised and the election is secure," the office told
Reuters in a statement.
Mississippi state websites sustained outages due to similar attacks,
and the CISA official said the agency was working with local
officials there to mitigate the impact.
In Arizona's Maricopa county, local officials were working on fixing
malfunctioning electronic voting machines that Trump and his
followers falsely claimed was proof of election fraud.
The CISA official said the agency had not seen any evidence of
malicious activity in Maricopa.
"To be very clear we have no indication of malfeasance or malicious
activity. It is a technical issue and they have resolved it," the
official said.
Responding to a question about delays in reporting of election
results, the CISA official said: "It's not a delay. It is really
just the normal verification process that can take from days to
weeks."
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in San Francisco and Raphael Satter in
Washington; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Tom Hogue)
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