So not only were voting machines connected directly to the Internet which they should not have been, they were using unencrypted, passwordless, clear text WiFi, which anyone with a moderate understanding of packet sniffing could intercept and conceivably spoof to report "corrections" to vote totals (provided a mechanism exists on the machines and master servers themselves).
So not only were voting machines connected directly to the Internet which they should not have been, they were using unencrypted, passwordless, clear text WiFi, which anyone with a moderate understanding of packet sniffing could intercept and conceivably spoof to report "corrections" to vote totals (provided a mechanism exists on the machines and master servers themselves).
Way to miss the forest for the trees, handshake.
Oh right, I forgot. Totally legit election with no funny business whatsoever, did I get that right?