A human programming error in a series of voting machines used this week in a Pennsylvania county has left chaos behind - and confirmed what many who have watched suspicious results trotted out in recent elections as absolute truth feared: Those machines are not infallible.
The Post Millennial explained an estimated 300 voting machines in the county were hit by the problem.
There are doubts raised about electronic voting machines literally every election, as those who accept the results must believe in the absolute impossibility of results being skewed, either by accident or by malicious scheming.
WND reported only a few months ago that a 96-page report from an expert in computer election security concluded one model of Dominion voting machine, those suspected of allowing manipulation during the 2020 election, actually has "critical vulnerabilities that can be exploited to subvert all of its security mechanisms.
In the unsealed July 1, 2021 report, University of Michigan computer science professor Alex Halderman, with the help of Prof. Drew Springall, conducts a "security analysis" of Dominion Voting System's "ballot marking devices," or BMDs, in particular, the corporation's "ImageCast X BMD.".
Halderman's deep analysis has led many of the same media who belittled Donald Trump and conservatives who claimed vote fraud in 2020 to switch their attention back to the potential for hacking in Dominion Voting System's voting machines.
"Expert report fuels election doubts as Georgia waits to update voting software: A newly unsealed expert report arguing that Georgia's Dominion voting machines are vulnerable to hacking is fueling election doubts in Georgia," read a headline in an NBC News story.
https://www.wnd.com/2023/11/programming-failure-voting-machines-leads-election-chaos/
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