Physician, now fully retired. Colonel, US Army (Retired). Photography, hiking, camping, and reading, playing with grandkids. Eclectic encyclopedic synthesist.
I find the Mike Lindell cybersymposium, uncovering new evidence of Dominion and state corruption in real time, as they are looking at new evidence from Mesa County, CO. Disc images of voting machine servers before and after a visit by Dominion and a rep from the Secretary...
...And interesting to me, they are discussing batch files! These are old DOS-based files to perform several sequential operations. They say they are old tech, 30 years or more. THEY ARE RIGHT! I used to write batch files when I was using my first MS-DOS based computers.
And another thing. It is so good to hear and see intelligent people acting like normal, intelligent, curious people interested in discovering the truth. No masks. Patting on the shoulder. Hugging. Leaning close to listen to someone. They are behaving normally!
How does Twitter determine what is misinformation re Covid? Do they have doctors w experience in virology who've treated Covid pts evaluating tweets? Or experts in research, medical science or epidemiology? And as there are still many unknowns, what exactly is misinformation?
1) Old Windows code from 1997, thus likely vulnerable to hacking.
2) Evidence of connection to external computers, supposedly impossible and also illegal.
3) Logs of connections by other computers deleted.
4) Election results from prior years all deleted.
5) New disc image...
@timk519 All the old SQL databases for prior elections were also DELETED after this Dominion employee "visited" for an update. Clearly illegal, because the data from elections is to be preserved.
The Lindell Symposium is going through rather technical cybergeek stuff, which may not sink into "journalists'" minds, but it is demonstrating irregularities in the election machine programming. "Ranked voting" in a county that doesn't use ranked voting, for example.
@timk519 ...a dominion employee who then replaced the entire disc with a disc image, making it near-impossible to see what was in those log files, how many and from where it was accessed.