Well aside from a long math conversation about blockchain, which I've had far too many times (not that I don't want to drop redpills, but it's a long conversation and tangental to Electors being the focus atm); there are other ways to secure digital transactions and voting besides blockchain. Just as RSA wasn't secure from the start, block-chain isn't either; it just appears secure in the present time to the public/industry.
I worked many of these issues, problems, formulas, etc. out decades ago, including putting in some of my inventions/tech for secure payments into a prototype phone (which along with about 100 other things) is in every smartphone for the last 18 years. Only thing is, Chi-Comm Valley and the 3 letter agencies, didn't adopt my security measures put in place (hardware or software or procedures).
At the heart of the issue of your statement though is a key redpill and that is, elections really shouldn't have any digital component. Paper and ink work perfectly, even at scale. The "problems" we have in our Election Integrity are intentionally done, it's not a technology problem; it's a Law & Order & Enforce the Constitution Problem.
Well aside from a long math conversation about blockchain, which I've had far too many times (not that I don't want to drop redpills, but it's a long conversation and tangental to Electors being the focus atm); there are other ways to secure digital transactions and voting besides blockchain. Just as RSA wasn't secure from the start, block-chain isn't either; it just appears secure in the present time to the public/industry.
I worked many of these issues, problems, formulas, etc. out decades ago, including putting in some of my inventions/tech for secure payments into a prototype phone (which along with about 100 other things) is in every smartphone for the last 18 years. Only thing is, Chi-Comm Valley and the 3 letter agencies, didn't adopt my security measures put in place (hardware or software or procedures).
At the heart of the issue of your statement though is a key redpill and that is, elections really shouldn't have any digital component. Paper and ink work perfectly, even at scale. The "problems" we have in our Election Integrity are intentionally done, it's not a technology problem; it's a Law & Order & Enforce the Constitution Problem.