My own research into the Dominion voting machines...
This is a five-page official report detailing why in 2019, Texas rejected electronic voting machines that are currently used all over the US.
Certification was denied for six specific reasons, including complexity (500 steps and 400 pages to install software), security and error issues. It seems that even the test plan failed, which is something that should never happen after release to a potential customer, IMO.
They even have an active USB port (page 5).
Imagine what they did not test.
https://www.sos.texas.gov/elections/forms/sysexam/oct2019-sneeringer.pdf
This Dominion document lists all of the places in the US Dominion machines are used. Page 67-on...
https://sos.ga.gov/admin/files/Dominion%20RFI_No%20Redactions.pdf
This Dominion document shows that they use foreign parts, and are owned by foreign entities (pages 22 and 36)...
View attachment 758895
View attachment 758896
https://files7.philadelphiavotes.com/announcements/Dominion_-_Redacted.pdf
Here is a Dominion Democracy Suite User Guide. It's hundreds of pages and shows how a user can delete all kinds of results they don't like...
https://www.sos.state.co.us/pubs/elections/VotingSystems/DVS-DemocracySuite511/documentation/UG-RTR-UserGuide-5-11-CO.pdf
Many of Dominion's machines, tabulators even, have modems which can connect to the internet via cell phone towers...
A team of election security experts used a “Google for servers” to challenge claims that voting machines do not connect to the internet and found some did.
www.nbcnews.com
If there are any dead links, I have preserved all of the documents here:
1drv.ms