Oddball
Unobtanium Member
Third is that the Dominion machines were networked using ethernet TCP/IP, and that can never be secure since it automatically impliments RPC, (Remote Process Control), which makes it vulnerable to outside attacks, without leaving any trace.Dominion can't win.
To win they would have to prove the defendant knew the machines were accurate and lied anyway.
It does not matter if the voting machines are accurate or not, only that it is reasonable to believe they are not.
And Dominion can't prove they are reliable.
First of all, they are not going to want to allow their code to be entered in as evidence.
Second is that all code does have some bugs.
Third is that the Dominion machines were networked using ethernet TCP/IP, and that can never be secure since it automatically impliments RPC, (Remote Process Control), which makes it vulnerable to outside attacks, without leaving any trace.
Except that Lindell says he has the traces.