There's a way to insert self-signed SSL certificates in the certificate chain, enabling Pillow Guy/Space Force to decrypt all the data.
Many schools, colleges, businesses, and workplaces use this method to know what their employees are doing.
However, Pillow Guy would need to have remote access to the voting machines in order to install the certificate. Unless there's some vulnerability in Windows that either hasn't been patched by Dominion technicians, or hasn't been publicly known yet (zero-day).
I highly doubt that any government can crack TLS encryption. Most likely, the Space Force or whoever hacked the voting machines to perform the SSL trick or some other MITM attack.
There's a way to insert self-signed SSL certificates in the certificate chain, enabling Pillow Guy/Space Force to decrypt all the data.
Many schools, colleges, businesses, and workplaces use this method to know what their employees are doing.
However, Pillow Guy would need to have remote access to the voting machines in order to install the certificate. Unless there's some vulnerability in Windows that either hasn't been patched by Dominion technicians, or hasn't been publicly known yet (zero-day).
I highly doubt that any government can crack TLS encryption. Most likely, the Space Force or whoever hacked the voting machines to perform the SSL trick or some other MITM attack.
A vulnerability known to the McAfee anti-virus team and left unpatched
and then exploited by the White Hats?
Windows exploits are going to come into focus, I feel.