I'm watching live while the crowd is digging through the forensic images turned over by the Mesa County Clerk. I believe this shows the settings, configs, logs, databases, of the tabulation machines from before, during, and after the 2020 election.
They just discovered in real time that the machines had Microsoft SQL server installed which contained databases for elections going back to 2019, and then on May 25 this year, ALL of those databases were deleted by someone from Dominion.
This is another smoking gun.
Yeah people are complaining about the unstructured-ness of this part, but I appreciate seeing these guys work their way through this and slowly figuring stuff out right in front of us.
Here's the problem, though. Those of us who have IT careers or backgrounds are able to understand what's going on without much hand-holding. But for the vast majority of the population, this is completely foreign. It is impossible for them to digest the information in any meaningful way.
The whole presentation should not have been featured in the symposium. They, at the very least, should have had it going on in a side-channel with other discussions going on being the feature. They could check in at intervals for updates.
This really just caused a lot of people's eyes to gloss over and tune out. This isn't me shitting on the effort. This is me saying that when you're presenting information of any kind, you need to understand your target audience. This thing was supposed to wake up all the normies, but they are not going to be moved by this presentation. They are going to tune out and because they didn't understand the information being shown, they will assume no information was presented.
I'm a normie with no IT or math background but found it fascinating. This is TRUE transparency - embrace it.
I'm in IT. What I saw were IT/forensic experts attacking a problem to resolve it.