this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2024
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It’s been months now since Dominion Voting Systems complained of a massive discovery leak and subsequently demanded the disqualification of an indicted “Kraken” lawyer from representing former Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne in a 2020 election-related defamation suit. While a Washington, D.C., federal court has taken no action on Dominion’s pending motion to boot attorney Stefanie Lambert from the case, the voting technology company has identified a new threat to discovery materials: a subpoena issued to Lambert in the criminal case of indicted former Colorado clerk Tina Peters (R).

In a Friday motion to enforce an existing protective order in their lawsuit, Dominion’s lawyers claimed that there appears to be a “highly-orchestrated scheme” by Byrne and Lambert to “improperly release yet more discovery information” through Peters’ case, which was set for trial in late July after months of delays.

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[–] dhork@lemmy.world 8 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Diebold was the Big Baddie in 2000. (Wikipedia lists Diebold as being formed in 2002, but also mentions a merger at that time, so it might have been their parent who made the machines in 2000?, I seem to recall them and ES&S being the main culprits.) They were pushing touch-screen voting machines with questionable software and no real paper trail. There were people reporting that the screens were so badly calibrated that people frequently mis-voted. There were a lot of independant researchers that singled out Diebold in particular for making insecure machines.

Diebold's reputation never really recovered. It went through a few name changes before eve tually being acquired by Dominion. But all the increased scrutiny seems to have really helped, voting systems now generally have paper trails and are auditable.