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Dominion Voting Systems have an internet connected, remotely controlled "backdoor" that is an engineered feature and was demonstrated in Georgia along with its vote flipping capabilities that are undetectable, which flipped Trump votes to Biden. Tina Peter's forensic analyst Mark Cook goes through a live presentation to show exactly...

28,889 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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In October, before the 2020 election, Dominion Voting Systems received a $400 MILLION dollar payment from Staple Street Capital, which has ties to China and the CCP. Smartmatic, SGO, and Dominion all allegedly share the same physical address in a small building in Barbados, as a registered headquarters. These companies also share licensing agreements which is also a part of their core software and coding. This connection alone poses a massive national security risk as Smartmatic itself was engineered specifically to alter and manipulate the outcome of elections through backdoors built into the systems, where NO hacking is even required to change election results, it is a feature which was created at the direction of Hugo Chavez to alter election outcomes during Smartmatic's development. The operator's manual itself exposes these backdoor, built-in, features that these systems have that give administrators and operators of these systems full control to alter multiple data points, both on-site and remotely. Testimonies of election workers calling Dominion when problems occurred with Dominion remotely fixing the problems, even after stating under oath that there was no internet connection. Stacy Abrams' website listed numerous vulnerabilities in these systems, Texas rejected using Dominion because they lacked basic security, but swing states and others were allowed to use their systems? These systems seem to have been permitted to use because of their remote and other backdoor capabilities. There were no errors, just sophisticated, intentional, fraud.

The SCIF

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MUST WATCH:🚨 Watch this crucial 20-minute video featuring prominent Democrats, computer science professors, and election security experts discussing the vulnerabilities in America's election system. They warn that the system is online, easily hackable, and often operates on outdated Windows 7 or older systems. Key Points: Easily Hackable Voting Equipment: All electronic voting equipment can be hacked as they must receive programming before each election from memory cards prepared on election management systems. These systems are often connected to the internet and run outdated Windows versions. Spread of Malware: If a county election management system is infected with malware, it can spread to USB drives, which then transfer it to voting machines, scanners, and ballot-marking devices throughout the county. Programming Practices: Most U.S. election systems are programmed by local county officials or third-party vendors. They use previously used USB drives on internet-connected computers before plugging them into scanners, tabulators, and voting machines. Outdated Systems: In 2019, the Associated Press reported that most of the 10,000 election jurisdictions, including swing states, were still using Windows 7 or older systems for ballot production, vote programming, counting, and reporting. End of Windows 7 Support: Windows 7 reached its end of life on January 14, 2020, with Microsoft stopping technical support and security updates. Remote Access and Modems: Voting machine manufacturers have installed remote-access software and wireless modems, connecting voting machines directly to the internet. NBC News reported in 2020 that ES&S, the largest U.S. election machine vendor, had installed at least 14,000 modems. Dominion Voting Systems: The second-largest vendor, Dominion, has publicly acknowledged using modems in their machines and running remote-access software during the 2020 election. For example, in Georgia, election worker Susan Voyles testified that Dominion employees operated remotely on ballot-marking devices and poll pads. Findings from Wisconsin and Michigan: Investigations found Dominion and ES&S machines online and connected to the internet. In Michigan, a modem chip was discovered in an ES&S voting machine, potentially allowing hackers to intercept and manipulate election results. Conclusion: Hackers can potentially infiltrate elections through vulnerable USB cards, election management systems, and voting machines themselves. This underscores the urgent need for securing America's election infrastructure.

KanekoaTheGreat

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