No.11592156 PB
https://twitter.com/CodeMonkeyZ/status/1326552844787310596
"Too bad we dont have the dominion source code to review. These types of things should be open source so everybody can poke through it."
Well, you're going to have to ask the EAC, NASS, a past congress, and others why they "certified" all those voting systems and accepted the idea they couldn't inspect the programming because it was proprietary. Voting is just an additive process. There is coding for how the ballots are presented, printed, whatever. But nothing so great and monumental that it must be protected as proprietary.
If you go back to a past post, this guy is an example of, "hmmmm…":
Paul DeGregorio
Mr. Paul DeGregorio served as commissioner of the United States Election Assistance Commission (EAC) from 2003-2007, and during his tenure at the EAC served as chairman. At the EAC, Mr. DeGregorio oversaw federal election reform, such as the implementation of the Help America Vote Act and the establishment of the first federal certification of voting systems.
Prior to the EAC, Mr. DeGregorio was Executive Vice President of the International Foundation for Election Systems (IFES). At IFES he also was senior election adviser. He promoted internet voting technologies and automation as Chief of Elections of Everyone Counts, Inc.
Someone who was involved in the Help America Vote Act, which turned voting towards electronic/touch screen voting after the 2000 chad fiasco, makes you wonder. Maybe he's OK. Maybe he's like a lot of state and county election officials that are in over their heads with electronic computer based voting. That act used the disabled and hanging chads as a means to introduce touch screens. And the disabled should have a means to vote more easily- but that does not have to apply to everyone. That didn't seem to catch as much as the DS wanted so then came the push about no Voter ID. And on it goes.
Keep in mind that because the candidates and races on a ballot change with every election, and there has to be a program update to accommodate, there is ample opportunity to introduce other things.