“DVSorder is a privacy flaw that affects Dominion Voting Systems (DVS) ImageCast Precinct (ICP) and ImageCast Evolution (ICE) ballot scanners, which are used in parts of 21 states. Under some circumstances, the flaw could allow members of the public to identify other peoples’ ballots and learn how they voted. This vulnerability is a privacy flaw and cannot directly modify results or change votes. Nevertheless, the secret ballot is an important security mechanism, and some voters – especially the most vulnerable in society – may face real or perceived threats of coercion unless the privacy of their votes is strongly protected. Many jurisdictions publish data from individual voted ballots, such as cast-vote records (the votes from each ballot) or ballot images (scans of each ballot). This data is usually supposed to be randomly shuffled, to protect voters’ privacy. The DVSorder vulnerability makes it possible to unshuffle the ballots and learn the order they were cast. This sometimes makes it possible to determine how specific individuals voted,” say a group of University of Michigan eggheads, plus one guy from Auburn University.
This of course is the kind of thing the fanboys seize upon thinking it validates their crazy bullshit about Dominion. Indeed we only found this because John Solomon tweeted his lame site’s story about it (though if anything it’s arguably a vulnerability violent Trumpsters would love since they would know whose house to burn down). Even if he reported it straight without omitting any details making it clear that no votes could ever be changed, Solomon just wanted “Dominion” and “flaw” in a headline, and damned if he didn’t get it. Give it a few hours to percolate down to the Gateway Pundit. They’ll turn it into the ABSOLUTE PROOF they’ve been waiting nearly two years for now.