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.
Experts can also prove these entries are created by an “extension” and they are all generated from a single computer.
Unlike other states, Hawaii assigns “Universally Unique Identifiers” (UUID) to each of its voters. The UUID generator Hawaii was using is called “Version 1.” It generates UUIDs based on the time and the MAC address of the computer that generated it. Using this method guarantees that the voter ID will be unique, but it also allows an analyst to decode the UUID and determine when it was created and the address of the computer that created it.
Scruffy_Nerfherder@exploding-heads.com 1 year ago
Whata funny is that there is nothing particularly hard about voting software.
You check a box, you count the checked boxes. Tally up all the boxes, there's your total.
You should also generate a paper receipt to prove that there is no tampering.
Voting software becomes hard and expensive when you program it to cheat.
admin@exploding-heads.com 1 year ago
Transparency is critical for trust. Cannot get that with software.
Need paper ballots hand counted