Synack, a San Francisco security platform, discovered serious flaws with the WinVote machine months ahead of this weekend's convention. The team simply plugged in a mouse and keyboard and bypassed the voting software by clicking "control-alt-delete.""It's really just a matter of plugging your USB drive in for five seconds and the thing's completely compromised at that point," Synack co-founder Jay Kaplan told CNET. "To the point where you can get remote access. It's very simple."The Synack team also cracked the machine from a mobile application by installing a remote desktop program to it. In one case study, Synack found a Virginia poll worker hacked the machine to play Minesweeper.A hacker, who only identified himself as "Oyster," tried to crack a Diebold voting machine after another team had compromised it."I hope that we find a load of vulnerabilities in these just so we can open it up to the public to see how serious the problem is," he told CNET.
"Oyster"
i guess this means the world is hisoyster
theres no loving way lmao
are you kidding me
you've got to be stuffting me