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4
DeepDMingDeep 4 points ago +4 / -0

Assume everything is on the up-and-up here. (it isn’t)

IANA software tech guy. But, I’m guessing rolling out a last minute update isn’t great practice. Your beta testers are American voters in a Presidential election. Seems like you should have had all of this worked out ahead of time.

But seriously, how hard should a program like this be to code if you weren’t going to cheat? It’s literally just counting. I know there is a security issue (in a fair system) but counting ballots seems like something I could learn to code in a weekend.

5
Cloudrdr 5 points ago +5 / -0

Seriously.

It is a TABULATOR. The functions should be simple arithmetic.

WHAT THE HELL NEED IS THERE FOR ALGORITHMS?

or is it ONE Person, 0.6775446454 Vote?

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Magazar 3 points ago +3 / -0

I am a software guy and I assure you that since voting machines have clocks the timeframe in which a patch is applied does not matter. Cheating could be triggered by time.

The machines do image recognition so the code is quite complex and prone to missmatches. It is not just counting punch holes like the old ones.

Machines should only be used to do a control count of a manual count. Like a helping tool not be the main show.

2
800080 2 points ago +2 / -0

... I’m guessing rolling out a last minute update isn’t great practice.

It's a horrible practice.

It happens much too often in most IT sectors usually due to incompetent IT managers who say "Just do it, we'll fix the problems later" after the tech staff tell them "It's not ready yet."