Is Election Fraud Possible in America?
By Richard Fernandez Nov 20, 2020 5:14 AM ET
Leaving aside who one was rooting for in the 2020 elections, are U.S. voting systems foolproof? For those who are interested, here is a link to the embattled Dominion Voting Systems documentation. The actual core device is a Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro (12.2) tablet running ImageCast X software.
The Smartmatic company, which is connected to elections in several third-world countries, claims no connection with Dominion, but as you can see from Smartmatic’s promotional material, there are superficial resemblances which prove nothing.
Dominion and Smartmatic do not collaborate in any way and have no affiliate relationships or financial ties.
Dominion does not use Smartmatic software.
The only associations the companies have ever had were:
– In 2009, Smartmatic licensed Dominion machines for use in the Philippines. The contract ended in a lawsuit.
– In 2010, Dominion purchased certain assets from Sequoia, a private U.S. Company. Smartmatic, a previous owner of Sequoia, he pursued legal actions against Dominion.
What one would really like to know, of course, is whether the two systems share the same algorithms, libraries, or methods. This would be possible if the public could see the code.
Can open source technology, where the code is published for all to see any suspicious items, help keep elections honest and secure? It can’t hurt. “With elections coming under more and more scrutiny due to vulnerable designs, aging machinery, hacking, foreign influence, and human incompetence, the OSET Institute is working on technology that will help ensure that every vote is counted as it was cast.â€
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https://pjmedia.com/richardfernandez/2020/11/20/is-election-fraud-possible-in-america-n1161357