On March 13th The Gateway Pundit revealed that the entire election system in New Mexico is vulnerable to manipulation by an uncertified, custom piece of software called SERVIS. Read: One Way To Keep Your Family Fed In A Crisis In elections, clear identification of the various software creators, software types, and hardware manufacturers appear to be blurred by design, leaving a corporate labyrinth for independent auditors to navigate.
The SERVIS program in New Mexico handles election management, election night reporting, and voter registration.
The obvious problem with the growing BPro/KnowINK enterprise is that having one piece of software running all parts of both the registration and election system creates massive vulnerability at a nation-state level in the entire system from top to bottom.
By way of background, TotalVote describes itself as a "Centralized voter registration and election management system that securely captures and manages voter, candidate, and all election information. It is the only software system that encompasses the entire election process into one system." TotalVote is internet-connected and in the case of at least one state - the software itself is hosted on the Amazon Azure Cloud.
Some states are using BPro/KnowINK products for their entire registration and election system.
Election experts in Hawaii can prove that Hawaii's voter registration database has backdated entries - meaning the official registration date is older than the unique identifier given to each voter - suggesting that entries are being fabricated in the database.
Election experts working on Hawaii's voter registration data decoded the UUIDs and compared the results with the official registration dates stored in the database.
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