matt blaze Profile picture
Nov 10, 2020 11 tweets 2 min read Read on X
People who study election technology have been warning for years that there are security weaknesses in voting systems, but have taken pains to point out that this is not the same as rigged elections.
Unfortunately, sloppiness about this distinction on the part of over-eager advocates helped set the stage for the misinformation currently being used to sow doubt about the current election.
Facts and nuance matter a lot here. Please be careful not to exaggerate.
There are silly people asserting that the fact that some election tech has bugs means that elections are rigged. That makes no sense. They are, in effect, claiming that every election in the last 20 years reported the opposite of the true outcome, which is obviously nonsensical.
While there are indeed vulnerabilities in some election tech, that's long way from actually rigging an election. Asserting that an election was actually rigged via a software flaw is an EXTRAORDINARY claim, something experts have been looking hard for for years and not found.
n fact, advances in election security over the last decade, such as risk limiting audits, have made it harder than ever to actually exploit software flaws. We still have much work to do, but claiming an election was rigged through software flaws requires very compelling evidence.
To my knowledge (and this is my field of expertise), no serious evidence has yet been found or presented that suggests that the 2020 election outcome in any state has been altered through technical exploitation. Period.
We should, of course, perform post-election audits (such as RLAs) of every contest outcome, as a routine part of elections in the US. Fortunately, there's been substantial progress toward this. Unfortunately, Congress has failed to enact legislation to mandate or fund them.
I've posted this before, but if you're interested in learning about election security and the many complex problems it encompasses, easily the best current overview is this NRC study: nap.edu/catalog/25120/…

I've also written a bit myself on this subject: georgetownlawtechreview.org/wp-content/upl…
In short, while the security of US election infrastructure isn’t where it should be, it is vastly improved over where it was 15 years ago. And while there are indeed security weaknesses, merely pointing out their existence is not evidence that any given election was rigged.
In others words, to credibly cast doubt on an election outcome, you need more than evidence that fraud was hypothetically *possible*. You need evidence that fraud *actually happened* to an extent that altered the outcome. So far, people have merely been asserting the former.

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More from @mattblaze

Nov 14, 2022
Radio nerditry: Yes, I've heard that KrakenRF pulled their passive radar code, and no, I'm not looking forward to revisiting ITAR after all these years.
There isn't, as far as I can tell, enough publicly-known information about the facts here to even speculate about whether this is an easily-resolved misunderstanding, over-caution, or a serious concern. I can imagine ways it could be any of the three. Hopefully not the latter.
Cryptography in the US, even open source software, used to be (and to a limited extent, still is) regulated under ITAR. It was a big attenuator on open research. But because different countries interpreted ITAR for cryptography differently, it wasn't as bad as it could be here.
Read 5 tweets
Nov 13, 2022
Unpopular and uncomfortable election integrity reality: While BS about "hacked elections" has been most loudly amplified by the Right in the US, they have no monopoly on it. This nonsense was mostly started by (and continues to be spread by) marginal activists on the Left.
Two difficult-to-reconcile truths about US election integrity. Any serious discussion of the subject must acknowledge both of them:

- There genuinely are some real vulnerabilities in some of our election infrastructure

- There's no evidence an election outcome has been hacked.
Whatever your political preferences, asserting than an election as been hacked is an EXTRAORDINARY claim, requiring compelling evidence. If someone makes such a claim, demand evidence.

The remedy for BS is truth, not equal-and-opposite BS.
Read 7 tweets
Nov 12, 2022
Even if it taxes your patience, being careful and following procedures in tallying votes is not evidence of fraud. In fact, it's the opposite of that.
"Isn't it suspicious that it's only tight races that are undecided?"

No. That's exactly what we'd expect.

Any "winners" reported so far are media projections from partial tallies released so far. The closer the race, the higher the % of votes cast they need to project a winner.
Very few jurisdictions across the US have reported 100% tallies in any races yet, and even those are still unofficial, uncertified results. State laws can delay full results until well after election day; in some, mail-in votes can't start to be processed until after polls close.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 10, 2022
Remember that Twitter's main asset is us users and our data, and the three people responsible for protecting it all quit simultaneously this morning.

Twitter may not even be around long enough to buy us all a year of free credit monitoring at this rate.
Any Twitter engineer being asked to certify compliance to a regulatory agency (such as the FTC) should seek independent (their own) legal advice before signing anything or making any statement to regulators.

This is a bus you do NOT want to be thrown under.
I can't emphasize how perilous this can be. "Self-certification of compliance" with an FTC consent decree might be presented as merely routine paperwork, no big deal.

No. It's a big deal, and if you're even thinking about agreeing to this, you need competent legal advice first.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 8, 2022
As election results start to come in this week, some losing candidates and supporters may claim that their election was "rigged" or "hacked". To sort fact from fiction, you have to understand how elections actually work. Here's a great reference: nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25120/…
A large fraction of “stop the steal” mis- and disinformation was OBVIOUS BS to those who understood the basics of election logistics, and tech. But it could sound convincing to the uninitiated. Learn how your local elections work, especially how ballots are handled and counted.
And many aspects of elections vary across states and counties. For example, in some places, for procedural and technical reasons, mail-in ballots aren’t processed until AFTER the polls close. If the number of those ballots is large, it can take a while before results are known.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 7, 2022
I've been using Mastodon for a couple days now. A couple (nonexpert) observations

The system as a whole functions. The major servers (that you're likely to sign up for) federate with each other, which means you can, in principle, follow and be followed just about anywhere. 1/
However, the system is clearly (and unsurprisingly) also straining under the newfound load right.

Many servers are closed to new signups, so you have to look for one that will take you, which may not be where most of your friends are. That's OK (see above), except that... 2/
... likely because of the load, timelines across different server instances are often a bit of a mess - out of order, slow to update, duplicate posts, etc. So it doesn't always feel like Twitter. Sometimes more like Twitter if the tweets were delivered by actual carrier pigeons.
Read 9 tweets

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