Mike is on WarRoom talking about his video. Threatened to sue Dominion! Wants he and them to go into a room, with media, to look at the evidence. They (Dominion) says he is lying, he says he has proof (information in the video).
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Just had a random thought. ATM machines are somewhat akin to voting machines. (standalone 'kiosk' style machines with user interfaces). I would expect everyone would want to hack an ATM - huge incentive. ATMs have to be connected to the network in order to check your balance, etc. So ... have there been examples of ATM machines being hacked?
I've worked on ATM's in the past, they are networked, but it isn't straightforward to access them unless you have inside knowledge.
A lot of them still run on Win95 too :)
Win95 - wow! I guess that's before windows 2000, which was quite the milestone!
I still see a lot of Windows XP screens, especially at airports; revealed when they have an error and the error message has the give-away XP 'style'.
So if ATMs are running an ultra-vulnerable OS, and have to be networked for balance-check and 'card-validity' checks. and are literally loaded with money ready to give away, why aren't they hacked if Dominion voting machines are so 'obviously' vulnerable? This is just my own personal 'reality check'.
Being networked and being on the internet are not necessarily the same thing.
I agree. There's a lot of loose, ambiguous terminology out there, some with historic origins that no longer apply or are relevant.
"on the internet" - these days, 'everything' is available on the 'internet', including 'broadcast TV', through packages like YouTube or HULU. My local 'ABC-7' 'TV' news channel has their own website where I can stream their live broadcasts, and read their stories more like a newspaper. Perhaps we say, 'exclusive to the internet' - that would allow for (eg) bitchute, but even that gets less clear when you think of YouTubeTV, which is now offering a package including live TV.
And what is a 'network' these days? It's an affiliation of local 'broadcast' stations, that features a news program combining some national elements with local elements.
"Cable News" is now available on corporate websites (cnn.com, foxnews.com, etc) but a lot of people still call it 'cable news' because at one point in time, that really meant, a channel exclusive to cable services.
And then you have people who produce their own news, which may be carried by YT or Bitchute, or just carried on its own website, but they've got a big enough 'brand' to be able to claim to be a 'channel'.
Anyway - my point is, it's hard to know where people are getting their information from these days. Obviously people on GAW are getting it from 'exclusive to the internet' sources, but when a person casually says, 'I get my news from the internet', it's not clear where that is.
All the vulnerabilities in the world don't mean shit if you lock down the means of interaction.
Exactly. I remember at one point, people freaking out that the local UI password was revealed. Being able to 'log in' to a 'walk up kiosk-style' machine means nothing (they are logged in / unlocked by default). Having a 'user' account, means nothing; you need an admin-level account, which is a whole 'nother ballgame!