
Did Talk of Election Hacking Do More Harm Than Good?
Election integrity activists are at odds over whether raising too many concerns about the security of US elections did more harm than good.
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Election integrity activists are at odds over whether raising too many concerns about the security of US elections did more harm than good.
Foreshadowing Global Corporate Grab; Facebook Ramping up Counterterrorism Strategy … and more picks.
The mainstream media assures us that foreign governments can’t hack the election, and downplays the risk of domestic threats to elections — the possibility that special interests could access voting machines and change votes.
A RAND report’s chilling predictions for the 2024 election — infrastructure hacks, AI disinfo, a lack of voting machine security — show the risks are worse than we thought.
This activist’s package of controversial measures are rooted in Trump’s Big Lie. Do any of them make sense?
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Election experts Jonathan Simon and Lynn Bernstein go deep into how America’s myriad of voting systems operate, and the reasons trust in them has cratered
There are some election security issues on which the views of legitimate experts and Trump-fueled conspiracy theorists align. Let’s harness this energy to get rid of voting machines.
A team of Trump 2020 partisans meddled with voting software to see if they could find proof for “Stop the Steal” claims. Perversely, their “probe” hints at how a future steal might work.
PICKS are stories from many sources, selected by our editors or recommended by our readers because they are important, surprising, troubling, enlightening, inspiring, or amusing. They appear on our site and in our daily newsletter. Please send suggested articles, videos, podcasts, etc. to picks@whowhatwhy.org. In Races to Run Elections, Candidates Are Backed by Key […]
As the Arizona election audit wraps up more than a month behind schedule, it leaves questions about the partisan nature of our politics. But which side is right?
Texas officials blasted ES&S’s software installation and authentication methods but decided to certify its voting system anyway.