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Partial passwords to some parts of the state's voting systems that were accidentally posted online pose no threat to Nov. 5 general election, the Colorado Department of State said on Tuesday.
The future of voting is online, and moving Arizona's elections to the Internet would save money, deter voter fraud and increase efficiency, a state lawmaker says.
Colorado’s Democrat governor said Thursday that he is providing state aircraft and vehicles to help with changing voting system passwords that were accidentally leaked on a state website.
The Colorado secretary of state said voting system passwords had been accidentally posted on a government website.
For months, the agency “improperly” hosted a publicly available spreadsheet on its website that included a hidden tab with partial passwords for its voting machines.
Secretary of State says passwords were posted accidentally, employee responsible no longer works for state.
Then, when electronic voting was introduced, it required a similarly secure online system that, while it has some flaws, still works to allow owners a good amount of security in casting their votes.
Dominion Voting Systems, which was the target of baseless conspiracy theories after the 2020 election, will be used by 27 states in the 2024 election. But some social media posts falsely claim Gov ...
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