Headline Roundup • November 1st, 2024
Voting System Passwords Leaked In Colorado
Summary from the AllSides News Team
The Colorado Secretary of State's office said it inadvertently published partial passwords for voting system components on its official website.
The Details: The passwords, accessible via a hidden tab in a public spreadsheet, were for BIOS components across 63 of the 64 counties in Colorado. Despite the exposure, Colorado Department of State officials assured the public that layers of security measures are still firmly in place to protect the state's elections. The incident was communicated to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), who are now working with Colorado officials to monitor the situation. However, many, including the Colorado Republican Party, have expressed significant concern, criticizing the secretary of state's office for what they perceive as a lack of competence.
For Context: This incident comes amidst heightened national conversations about election integrity, following claims from former President Donald Trump regarding widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold had, before this incident, assured the state of its election security after a dozen fraudulent mail-in ballots were discovered.
How the Media Covered It: Newsweek (Center bias) reported the incident, emphasizing the state officials' assurances of the security of Colorado elections despite the error.
Associated Press (Lean Left bias) provided a similar narrative in its coverage, pointing out in detail the multiple security safeguards currently in place.
Washington Examiner (Lean Right bias), however, took a more critical stance. Their opinion piece denounced Secretary of State Jena Griswold for handling the incident, drawing parallels to a hiccup in 2022 and discussing the possibility of the event fueling further skepticism about election integrity. The piece was especially critical of Griswold's response to the scrutiny, suggesting a partisan motive behind her actions.
An editor wrote this summary with the help of AllSides AI.Featured Coverage of this Story

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The office of Colorado's secretary of state has said partial passwords for voting system components were mistakenly posted on its official website.
The passwords, accessible via a hidden tab in a publicly available spreadsheet, were removed on October 24 after the error was discovered. State officials emphasized that the incident was inadvertent, has been rectified, and has not affected the election process.
Coloradoās Democrat governor said Thursday that he is providing state aircraft and vehicles to help with changing voting system passwords that were accidentally leaked on a state website.
The mistake comes amid skepticism of voting systems, even though U.S. election nationwide remain fair and reliable.
The Colorado secretary of state who pushed to keep former President Donald Trump off the stateās ballot now faces heat for an election security breach in her own office.
Sensitive BIOS passwords for election tabulation computers in 63 of Coloradoās 64 counties were inadvertently leaked on the secretary of stateās website ā buried in a hidden Excel spreadsheet tab with hundreds of passwords that anyone could unhide. The document, taken down last week, had been online for months.
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