Scott Leiendecker is the guy who just bought dominion voting machines, he changed the name when he bought it to Liberty Vote. Scott allegedly made all of his money from his company KnowInk, which provides electronic poll books and election technology to polling stations all over the country. No idea how his company won so many contracts, but his tech is being used in 29 states and like 1,700 jurisdictions. KnowInk is a private company so we have no idea if BlackRock propped his ass up after all of the controversy regarding Staple Street buying Dominion back in 2018, but Staple Street was partnered with Travelers Insurance and Hauser Private Equity when they bought Dominion, and BlackRock has substantial shares in both Travelers and Hauser, so obviously they were partnered in a veiled kind of way with Staple Steet, which means our voting machines were basically owned by BlackRock prior to Scott buying Dominion. I don’t think BlackRock would give up that sort of influence over U.S. voting to some Republican activist, but I guarantee you they would try to coverup their influence over our voting machines by using their influence over politics to get Scott all of these contracts, ensuring he became extremely wealthy in a short amount of time, so he could buy Dominion and they could retain their influence without anyone being able to prove their connection.
Who knows, idk. But I’d be willing to bet we haven’t had a legitimate election on a single digital voting machine since they started being used in 2000. Even if some of the elections were legit on those machines, there are kids who’ve hacked those machines and compromised the results in under 10 minutes, so it’s not like it’s hard for other people at the poling stations to rig the machines if enough of their friends are watching the polls who will look the other way as the machines are being rigged before voting begins. Some other dude hacked one of their voting machines using a pen and nothing else in front of a judge back in 2021, proving it could be done with ease if somebody really wanted to.
Reminder about the 2020 election, the Dominion machines that were sent off to be investigated for fraud in Nashville just so happened to be in the building where some “crazed suicidal guy” decided to detonate a bomb outside of, strangely enough, media only talked about that event for the day it happened and then it was never mentioned again, most Americans don’t even remember that bombing ever happening because it got memory holed across the board in MSM. The building those machines were in was severely damaged, /pol/ had a great thread about this event shortly after it happened, worth reading if you can find it.
https://abcnews.go.com/amp/Politics/fbi-report-finds-nashville-bomber-wanted-kill-motivated/story?id=76471078
Even if some of the elections were legit on those machines, there are kids who’ve hacked those machines and compromised the results in under 10 minutes
The reality is bad enough without having to resort to exaggeration. This is more on Brietbart than you, but it's still bad.
kids were given an introductory walkthrough of how to perform an SQL injection
39 kids from ages 6-17 attempted to hack replicas of the SOS websites of 6 swing states 35 kids were able to complete an exploit.
What this means is they gave instruction amounting to "type this and then the name you want and it's will work," then sat them down at PCs with a browser pointed at a website that was already known to have the vulnerability. Kids didn't "hack voting machines in under 10 minutes." They typed a given string into a text box. Four of them were bad at following instructions.
And being able to manipulate the public result website (while hilariously inept) doesn't mean being able to affect the real tallies. Hyperbole is why people tune out the real stories about this stuff.
Scott Leiendecker is the guy who just bought dominion voting machines, he changed the name when he bought it to Liberty Vote. Scott allegedly made all of his money from his company KnowInk, which provides electronic poll books and election technology to polling stations all over the country. No idea how his company won so many contracts, but his tech is being used in 29 states and like 1,700 jurisdictions. KnowInk is a private company so we have no idea if BlackRock propped his ass up after all of the controversy regarding Staple Street buying Dominion back in 2018, but Staple Street was partnered with Travelers Insurance and Hauser Private Equity when they bought Dominion, and BlackRock has substantial shares in both Travelers and Hauser, so obviously they were partnered in a veiled kind of way with Staple Steet, which means our voting machines were basically owned by BlackRock prior to Scott buying Dominion. I don’t think BlackRock would give up that sort of influence over U.S. voting to some Republican activist, but I guarantee you they would try to coverup their influence over our voting machines by using their influence over politics to get Scott all of these contracts, ensuring he became extremely wealthy in a short amount of time, so he could buy Dominion and they could retain their influence without anyone being able to prove their connection.
Who knows, idk. But I’d be willing to bet we haven’t had a legitimate election on a single digital voting machine since they started being used in 2000. Even if some of the elections were legit on those machines, there are kids who’ve hacked those machines and compromised the results in under 10 minutes, so it’s not like it’s hard for other people at the poling stations to rig the machines if enough of their friends are watching the polls who will look the other way as the machines are being rigged before voting begins. Some other dude hacked one of their voting machines using a pen and nothing else in front of a judge back in 2021, proving it could be done with ease if somebody really wanted to.
https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2018/08/13/11-year-old-hacks-into-mock-florida-election-results-website-in-under-10-minutes/
Reminder about the 2020 election, the Dominion machines that were sent off to be investigated for fraud in Nashville just so happened to be in the building where some “crazed suicidal guy” decided to detonate a bomb outside of, strangely enough, media only talked about that event for the day it happened and then it was never mentioned again, most Americans don’t even remember that bombing ever happening because it got memory holed across the board in MSM. The building those machines were in was severely damaged, /pol/ had a great thread about this event shortly after it happened, worth reading if you can find it. https://abcnews.go.com/amp/Politics/fbi-report-finds-nashville-bomber-wanted-kill-motivated/story?id=76471078
The reality is bad enough without having to resort to exaggeration. This is more on Brietbart than you, but it's still bad.
What this means is they gave instruction amounting to "type this and then the name you want and it's will work," then sat them down at PCs with a browser pointed at a website that was already known to have the vulnerability. Kids didn't "hack voting machines in under 10 minutes." They typed a given string into a text box. Four of them were bad at following instructions.
And being able to manipulate the public result website (while hilariously inept) doesn't mean being able to affect the real tallies. Hyperbole is why people tune out the real stories about this stuff.