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It makes the results more widely known, so that if one were to try to fix an election, it would require a whole lot of people to keep their silence.
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Right, but that's not necessarily difficult to orchestrate. Complex conspiracies can be crafted with only a small cadre of informed members.
What you're suggesting is that the potential for individual manufacturers rigging individual elections is more dangerous than a single entity fixing elections from a centralised position. I don't really buy it.
That said, I don't really buy electronic voting machines in the first place. It's just a bad idea all around.
There's nowhere I can't reach.