The use of Microsoft’s vote-counting technology in Monday’s Iowa Caucus may foreshadow a future in which corporate technology plays a central role in U.S. elections, raising concerns about the possibility of private firms skewing the democratic process.
In a disclosure largely unreported by the news media last year, President Obama’s Special Commission on Election Reform recommended that commercial software and computers, such as iPads, be used to accurately record and count Americans’ votes — even though companies’ financial interests can be helped or hurt by the outcome of those elections.
Following election issues that plagued the Iowa Caucus in the 2012 presidential race, Microsoft partnered with the technology firm InterKnowlogy as well as the Democratic and Republican parties to develop and deploy an electronic reporting system used in the caucus on Monday. But now questions have been raised as to the effectiveness of the Microsoft volunteer effort.
Already, some political participants are raising the alarm about Microsoft leaders’ ties to presidential candidates.
CBS News reported:
anybody else sick of Bill Gates?
ReplyDeleteNot good Bill Gates is undeniably a DemocRAT and does what they want like Soros. His Microsoft programs are applied with the NSA and Homeland Security. So don't tell me he will not have a manipulative backdoor hidden in his program. Just like he did with Windows 8 and windows 10.
ReplyDelete