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This could literally be AI fantasy. Shame on whoever created this.
33 days ago [-]
loeg 33 days ago [-]
I hit "flag" and I'd suggest everyone else do so as well.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
I strongly disagree. It should be examined (their analysis, the artifacts they discovered, and whether or not they are similar to the artifacts that could be created from software similar to the repo that was shared below). It's worth asking this community to examine and discuss it. This is clearly related to the professional interests of this community, and this community is uniquely suited to bring insight to it.
loeg 33 days ago [-]
It's an extreme and divisive claim on a pay-for-publish local TV channel website. The details are unpersuasive coincidence and no reliable 3rd party has substantiated the allegations. The originator of the claims is an organization that didn't exist three months ago. These are all reasons to be pretty skeptical before amplifying.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
All of your criticisms are unrelated to understanding the analysis (or software). Let's read it, work through it and discuss it, rather than dismissing it for all the wrong reasons. Flagging this submission is anti-curious. Instead of not engaging if you're not interested in doing the work, you're trying to suppress other people from doing the work. It may turn out that none of it is convincing, but we don't know that right now and what has already been presented is surprising and worth investigating.
throwworhtthrow 33 days ago [-]
I looked at the source blog post and decided it was pretty shoddy. I kind of agree that a reasonable person would doubt the veracity of this post, not just for the reasons loeg mentioned, but because the presented "evidence" is a single cherry-pick from data with lots of inherent variance.
I think it's valid criticism to say that you should have taken a closer look before submitting, and concluded that it was too junky for HN. In which case the flagging is appropriate.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Can you share your analysis of the data? Other commenters have included details. I think we all would be interested in more than vague value judgments that you took a look, didn't like it and therefore tried to flag to repress discussion of it
perching_aix 33 days ago [-]
> and therefore tried to flag to repress discussion of it
nice mind reading skills over there
thejazzman 33 days ago [-]
there are multiple comments in here calling for people to flag this thread. AND IT WORKED. this was ripped off the front page yesterday.
the idea we can't discuss it is the most scandalous of all, IMO, especially given we are just bunch of nerds discussing shit.
loeg 33 days ago [-]
This is not a forum for original research. Additionally, this community is not well-equipped for sober analysis of divisive topics.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Trying to repress discussion is the opposite of soberly analyzing divisive topics, so you are attempting to prove your point. There are many people who disagree with you (including me) and would encourage you to dig in and practice curiosity and open discussion
perching_aix 33 days ago [-]
> so you are attempting to prove your point
They're sharing their opinion; no proofs to be found anywhere, nor evidences.
> Trying to repress discussion is the opposite of soberly analyzing divisive topics
In your opinion, right? Because under mathematical logic, the opposite of "repressing discussion" is "encouraging discussion", nothing less, nothing more.
Suppose there's a divisive topic that is posted on a forum with mostly common or at least topic-unaligned appeal. Stands to reason then that most discussion on that topic will be of low quality, since again, the community on the forum is not well-aligned to debate on the matter, right? That is the reasoning behind their opinion I'd imagine, and I can definitely agree with this personally.
And while inevitably there would be a minority of people who are well equipped to engage the topic productively, even if they post and their posts gain traction, the discussions around them will be nevertheless low quality - I think this prediction is agreeable as well at least.
Note also that nowhere in this model is the intent of the participants represented anywhere. So even though your intent is commendable:
> would encourage you to dig in and practice curiosity and open discussion
... it nevertheless misses the point. You're also (supposedly) asking for topically better aligned minds to put themselves through the torture of engaging those (supposedly) overwhelmingly not, both in the sense that they're (supposedly) super not capable, and in the sense that (supposedly) there are a lot more of them in here than not.
This is further supported how for example in this thread you exercised what I refer to as mind reading in both of the comments I've seen from you.
Example #[1]:
> and therefore tried to flag to repress discussion of it
They said that they flagged it because it's:
> too junky
... not because they're trying to repress discussion of it. Naturally, I do recognize that the post getting flagged would prevent further discussion of it, but it is both dishonest to say that they did it with that goal in mind (their goal is in their mind, which you cannot read) and also just completely untrue (in my opinion).
Example #[2]:
> so you are attempting to prove your point
In this scenario you're telling them what they're doing, which is again something only they can know. You only really know what you think they're doing, but that is not what you're saying. Consider the following alternative:
> so I think that goes directly against your point.
Note the "I think" part.
These are both very standout signs (for me at least) that quality discourse, especially on divisive topics, would not be possible with you. I further think that this is true for many other people as well, in most of the threads here. I highly question if it is possible to do with me as well, particularly in specific topics, and with consistency. I'd go as far as to say that with random people, on the internet, it is essentially impossible to have productive discussion on divisive matters, if it is even a possibility at all, ever.
asking others to flag an article is not about sharing an opinion, but an attempt for a flag to actually have consequences.
this was removed from the front page, spot 3 when i saw it, yesterday due to these flags.
so to defend the claim someone didn't do exactly what they did - and worked - is a bit awkward to me
perching_aix 33 days ago [-]
> asking others to flag an article is not about sharing an opinion
It's also not what I pointed at to be an opinion, but this:
> This is not a forum for original research. Additionally, this community is not well-equipped for sober analysis of divisive topics.
Interesting thing to point out nonetheless, will mull it over.
> due to these flags
I do not believe this can be established. I further find it very unlikely that people would flag a post decidedly because this specific downvoted person encouraged them to.
> to defend the claim someone didn't do exactly what they did
This is not a claim that was posted in the comments I was replying to, and so it's impossible for me to be defending it. I take you mean why am I defending the people who flagged the post and have encouraged others to do so - ignoring that this defending behavior is completely perceptual on your end, I wrote what I did because the reading that "they did it so that it would prevent discussion" is a different one, is implying more than the former, and I believe is strongly misleading and conspiratorial as a result.
seethedeaduu 32 days ago [-]
> Because under mathematical logic, the opposite of "repressing discussion" is "encouraging discussion", nothing less, nothing more.
What? No...
cwillu 32 days ago [-]
This is not wikipedia. About the only relevant thing in the guidelines is that most stories about politics are off-topic, but that's not the reason you provided.
33 days ago [-]
throwworhtthrow 33 days ago [-]
I took a look at their data, then came back to HN to post a gentle debunk-of-sorts. But I couldn't submit my comment because the post had been flagged.
I think it would have been better if you'd left your follow-up comment [1] when flagging. (FWIW I agree with your reasoning.) Flagging without comment was counterproductive, as it spawned a second submission from folks suspicious of why the first one was flagged.
This is of concern to the community given the apparent overlap with the technical expertise of a DOGE employee, Ethan Shaotran, and his prior work for a Musk sponsored hackathon where he created software that could spoof ballot tabulation.
Apparently, Shaotran removed his name from the repo and is now listed as a private user, but it can be found in the archive of the devpost page linked from the repo: https://devpost.com/software/ballotproof-vision
I don't really understand how would opens source software that checks the validity of ballots, or even generate fake ballots help in committing election fraud? The hard part is getting the fake ballot to the counting location, how the fake ballots is made, be it by machine or by hand is not particularly relevant, anyone can do that.
patcon 33 days ago [-]
The repo seems to describe something doing the opposite, no? This is someone who wanted to ensure ballots were counted, not someone motivated to spoof them, right?
There is nothing spooky or nefarious about the existence of that test suite.
But that this skill set gets you into E's inner circle definitely goes onto the ever-growing pile of circumstantial evidence that something is not right.
smsm42 33 days ago [-]
Your point is if you're interested in writing code to verify the validity of elections, that is evidence to the suspicion your employer sonehow corrupted the election? That does not sound like a sane line of reasoning.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
My point is that in the context of Elon and the 2024 election, where there is objectively a lot of suspicious activity, the fact that his inner circle contains people with expertise in generating ballots is also suspicious.
Yes I will conceed that all this talk is circumstantial. It's like Lab Leak (even the desire to gaslight anyone who talks about it)
smsm42 33 days ago [-]
> where there is objectively a lot of suspicious activity,
The word "objectively" does a lot of work here, and most of it is unpaid. Every election has irregularities, and every election has the losing side casting suspicions around. No, I literally mean every single one. We have search engines now. Just go and look up. It's literally every time.
Sometimes, those suspicions turn true - there are really people who conduct fraud in elections, in various ways. Most often, though, those suspicions are thrown around by partisans unable to comprehend how their side, being obviously morally superior, the only sane side and widely popular, still lost the election. In other words, they are just junk. Without a substantial evidence base, any amount of them do not constitute any evidentiary base. Zero times millions is still the same zero.
> people with expertise in generating ballots
Did you ever actually see a real US election ballot? Generating something like that is beyond trivial. There are many official sites that just let you download a sample ballot. Even if that ballot is somehow modified from the actual one in subtle ways, the actual one is quite simple too. It may be a problem to get the paper exactly right if they check that, but having the code to generate a ballot does not help you there in any way. And also generating something like that would be pretty useless by itself, if you have electoral fraud in mind, because the problem is not producing the paper, it's getting it into the system and getting it counted and not getting caught while doing that.
Summarily, this "expertise" does not enable you in any non-trivial way to perpetrate election fraud, and does not make any hard part of that any easier. Also, you can find people with such expertise - and better - at any design and print shop. They can reproduce any of it - and much more complex designs - without any problem, that's literally what they do all day.
> Yes I will conceed that all this talk is circumstantial.
No, "circumstantial" is way too generous a word for this. "Empty fantasies" is more fitting.
jquery 33 days ago [-]
I’ve been skeptical of claims that Musk rigged the election, despite Trump basically bragging that he did. I figured he was just trying to “own the libs” and make us get mad over nothing.
Since Trump is extremely concerned about election security I’m sure he will send teams of people to investigate these anomalies.
34 days ago [-]
Ancalagon 34 days ago [-]
Who are these sociopaths man like why would you create that
caspper69 34 days ago [-]
[flagged]
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
Don't forget that DT's "mishandled documents" were actually top secret information about election security wrt Russia. Really would like to know what all those meetings between Vlad and Elon in 2024 were about.
At the end of the full report, there are two histograms of the vote shares earned by Harris and by Trump, respectively, overlaid by a gaussian ("normal") distribution. Election shares tend to follow gaussian distributions [1]. In Clark County, NV, the election shares have a strong discontinuity that favors Trump, but only in Early Voting results.
This discontinuity only appears to exist on machines that tabulated a lot of results.
Past elections that are suspected to have been fraudulent (a few in Russia and one in Uganda, prior to 2012) show these exact same types of discontinuities, whereas elections that are generally regarded as secure do not show these types of discontinuities [1].
Are there other potential explanations for these discontinuities? ("Russian Tails" as they are colloquially known [2].) Yes! Election Truth Alliance lists them out as any proper data scientist would. Furthermore, ETA lists and links their datasets, and invites anyone to use them. This is what a model data scientist should do.
It seems that they are trying to get more data from more contested areas. What will they find? I don't know, but it seems that the more this phenomenon presents itself, then some of the alternate hypotheses can be ruled out.
I’m old enough to remember way back in 2023 when “election denier” was a nonstop slur for anyone right of center.
tzs 33 days ago [-]
By 2023 all of the 2020 election claims had been thoroughly investigated by numerous Republican officials and committees and they found no actual evidence. Anyone who still believed at that point in the claims the election was stolen is at best willfully ignorant.
The analysis here is using publicly available data and they are pointing out statistical properties of that data that they say are highly indicative of manipulation. They are giving enough information for outside statisticians and others to reproduce their work.
This is not at all comparable to most of the claims after the 2020 election. The closest comparable claims in 2020 were some of the claims based on some vote distributions in some districts not obeying Benford's law. Those didn't hold up because given the demographics of those districts Benford's law would not be expected to hold.
(I wrote a web-based simple simulation using data from one of the states that the people basing claims on Benford's law were using in order to illustrate how much the distribution could differ from a Benford distribution. Anyone curious can find it here [1]. There's a link on that page to run it).
What's the political alignment of this group? All we have is a paid press release from a group founded in 2024, with an executive board consisting of "Jive, Lilli, and Nathan."
LorenPechtel 33 days ago [-]
What they are showing is that not in-person ballots favored Harris--which is no surprise as on average Democrats are more concerned with Covid than Republicans as evidenced by the latter having twice the demographic-adjusted death rate from it (and probably actually higher because it is a diagnosis not liked in many Republican areas and it's easy enough to "overlook" the sudden death was actually from a clot from Covid infection.)
But this time around it's not going to face honest scrutiny in the courts so they won't have to admit they have nothing.
deckar01 32 days ago [-]
I was able to reproduce the vote skew / batch size correlation in early voting. The average batch size for mail voting was way higher (6 machines) and election day was lower (3x machines). The fact that the vote ratio is more distributed for mail voting with way more votes per machine is what highlights incongruity for me. Stats are not always intuitive though.
deckar01 32 days ago [-]
Edit: Mail voting is not more distributed. You can’t analyze the distribution of a set that small using its min and max, it has to be the full range like the other sets. Distribution approaches zero as bin size increases regardless of voting source. This no longer seems surprising.
beedeebeedee 32 days ago [-]
Yeah, I was confused about that when I tried to replicate the study for all of the counting groups ('Mail', 'Early Voting', 'Election Day'). I'd like to know more about the data to understand how to compare the others with early voting.
quotemstr 33 days ago [-]
Articles like this are pure chutzpah. The same side that's alleging interference in 2024 suggested that to question election irregularities in 2020 was to reject democracy itself. I don't think the authors are going to convince anyone.
"But there's evidence this time and there wasn't in 2020!" Well, the other side would argue the opposite. We're not going to get anywhere this way.
Look: regardless of the the extent to which these alleged voting shenanigans are real, we need to fix the system. The legitimacy of the state is at risk.
Just as Caesar's wife must be above reproach, our voting system must be above reproach. There are plenty of common sense things officials can take to bolster the public's faith in the system. For example, we should ban electronic voting machines. The real threat to democracy isn't election manipulation but officials who refuse to enact measures that would dispel even the appearance of manipulation.
loeg 33 days ago [-]
> The same side that's alleging interference in 2024 suggested that to question election irregularities in 2020 was to reject democracy itself.
It is absolutely not the position of mainstream Democrats that the 2024 election was rigged, invalid etc. This ETA organization (founded December) is some fringe weirdo and doesn't represent dems.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
The position of the Democratic party shouldn't change the analysis. If there is evidence it should be analyzed on its own merits.
loeg 33 days ago [-]
GP is insinuating that the 2024 dem response to losing the election is comparable to 2020 gop response to losing that election; it is not.
Trasmatta 33 days ago [-]
> The same side that's alleging interference in 2024 suggested that to question election irregularities in 2020 was to reject democracy itself. I don't think the authors are going to convince anyone.
The people claiming election interference in 2020 had every chance to provide any piece of evidence, and they never could.
z3c0 33 days ago [-]
I'm concerned by the turn of this thread. The claims of voter fraud in 2020 were tenuous claims based on mail-in ballots and other speculation. This is a claim based on statistical analysis -- something I'd think would click with the HN crowd, regardless if there's room for debate on the meaning of the stats.
CWuestefeld 33 days ago [-]
Democracy demands a lot of the electorate. We have to be willing to suppress our own values and accept those of our opponents, when the vote doesn't go our way.
It's reasonable for all of us to expect that the election was secure, with a very high degree of certainty. When people aren't willing to consider the possibility of shenanigans, or that the systems* we're using might be insecure, we shouldn't be surprised that people are unwilling to do the democratic thing and accept the winner.
*by "system", I don't just mean the voting machines themselves, but also the whole process surrounding the collection and tallying of votes.
33 days ago [-]
DoctorOW 33 days ago [-]
> Articles like this are pure chutzpah.
I shouldn't spend time on this but it seems from context you think that word means "bullshit" and it doesn't. I'm sorry for pointing it out but it bothers me.
> "But there's evidence this time and there wasn't in 2020!" Well, the other side would argue the opposite. We're not going to get anywhere this way.
We might be able to by actually looking at the evidence. This is a really common problem I see among people who through good intentions avoid controversial topics.
Sure scientists say the moon is real, but Keith on Facebook says it's a hologram. I guess we should rule out any evidence from the entire field of astronomy until they can dispel even the appearance of misinformation.
lanternfish 33 days ago [-]
I'm honestly not sure that their analysis passes muster. It seems that the main consideration is that Harris underperformed compared to down-ballot races and that the underperformance was ahistoric. However, the campaign was also ahistoric: she ran as a pseudo-incumbent under an unpopular presidency without as much of the name recognition incumbency usually offers. It seems extremely likely to me that this drop off in early voting numbers is indicative of an exceptionally weak campaign as opposed to widespread (consistent across all swing states) manipulation.
defrost 33 days ago [-]
Their specific claim is odd, it's that the record of every machine in the county showed an expected random pattern of votes for the first 300 or so votes ..
( "random" here means more chaotic and unpredictable )
after which there was a more correlated bias toward one candidate that had a stong early trend toward a particular outcome (consistent clumping with little bounce).
The assertion is that this rarely seen in "real free voting data".
I wouldn't know where I was supposed to draw that dotted line if it weren't already there. And I'd expect there to be less variance in vote percentages among machines that processed many votes than those that only processed a couple. But okay, that picture shows that Trump overperformed in the early vote among machines in Clark County that processed many votes (and that Harris overperformed among those that processed few.) Couldn't this effect emerge from the geographic distribution of voting locations? The points at the right of the scatterplot would tend to represent red rural precincts serving many early voters, while those on the left would represent urban areas denser with machines than they are with early voters. (And there are other considerations, such as that Trump voters may have been more likely to show up in person to early vote than to mail in votes. The vote totals by voting method would seem to show this—but, fine, they're under dispute here.)
These analysts acknowledge the "deep red areas" explanation in their pdf, but they handwave it away in an unconvincing way: they say that the same effect doesn't occur for election day voting, only the early vote. But most voting in Nevada doesn't happen on Election Day. According to the data they present, every single voting machine in Clark County processed less than 150 election-day votes, with most well under 100. That is, they'd all be well to the left of the dotted line. So even in the vote-manipulation scenario, these analysts should expect to be seeing no separation effect for the election-day vote. Its absence tells us nothing.
z3c0 33 days ago [-]
The main consideration is at the beginning: the stats largely resemble the patterns of verified instances of voter fraud, as in Russia and Georgia.
It seems that you're suggesting some fairly obvious factors working against Harris weren't considered by an organization whose entire purpose is to sniff out voter fraud. Are you suggesting that they overlooked such an obvious detail, or that they're willfully ignoring it?
loeg 33 days ago [-]
More specifically, their claims are nonsense and (at best) wishful thinking.
defrost 33 days ago [-]
You've download the raw data and confirmed for yourself that there's no "russian tail" pattern in the data?
loeg 33 days ago [-]
This is literally numerology. I don't find it persuasive, no.
defrost 33 days ago [-]
It's not neccesarily correct. True.
It is not "literally numerology", that's just hyperbole on your part.
None of your comments in this thread have had any substance, just repetition of the same "gut feeling" opinion.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Another commenter has posted a colab notebook. You've been dismissive in every post, but based on your own value judgments and not based on statistical analysis. At least copy and paste their colab notebook (and read the original analysis) before dismissing.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
You are missing most of their analysis. The surprising anomaly (the so called "Russian Tail") appears in early votes but not the Election Day votes or mail-in ballots. There analysis is worth reading again to catch what you missed. Another commenter has posted their colab notebook, so you can dig in if you want to see the details
amai 33 days ago [-]
Election machines are forbidden in Germany for good reasons.
beedeebeedee 34 days ago [-]
Newsweek article that provides more context for the Election Truth Alliance's analysis as well as other claims (and statements by Trump alluding to it)
"He knows those computers better than anybody. All those computers. Those vote-counting computers," Trump told the crowd. "And we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide."
Regardless of the ETA's analysis, or the DOGE employees ballot software, that comment by Trump on its own raises the suspicion that this should be investigated and not immediately flagged, downvoted and dismissed
33 days ago [-]
33 days ago [-]
brchr 33 days ago [-]
It is possible to reproduce one of the key claims in this post -- the "Russian tail" in the early voting tallies -- straight from the raw data hosted on the Clark County, NV website. This code can be run in a Colab notebook:
# Download and extract zip file
import requests
import zipfile
import io
# Get raw data from Clark County website
zip_url = "https://elections.clarkcountynv.gov/electionresultsTV/cvr/24G/24G_CVRExport_NOV_Final_Confidential.zip"
# Download the zip file
response = requests.get(zip_url)
zip_file = zipfile.ZipFile(io.BytesIO(response.content))
# Extract to the current working directory
zip_file.extractall()
# Close the zip file
zip_file.close()
import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
# Read the actual data, skipping the first three header rows and excluding downballot races
df = pd.read_csv('/content/24G_CVRExport_NOV_Final_Confidential.csv', skiprows=3, usecols=range(21), low_memory=False)
# Find the Trump and Harris columns
trump_col = "REP"
harris_col = "DEM"
# Convert to numeric
df[trump_col] = pd.to_numeric(df[trump_col], errors='coerce')
df[harris_col] = pd.to_numeric(df[harris_col], errors='coerce')
# Filter for early voting
early_voting = df[df['CountingGroup'] == 'Early Voting']
# Group by tabulator and calculate percentages
tabulator_stats = early_voting.groupby('TabulatorNum').agg({
harris_col: 'sum',
trump_col: 'sum'
}).reset_index()
# Calculate total votes and percentages
tabulator_stats['total_votes'] = tabulator_stats[harris_col] + tabulator_stats[trump_col]
tabulator_stats['harris_pct'] = tabulator_stats[harris_col] / tabulator_stats['total_votes'] \* 100
tabulator_stats['trump_pct'] = tabulator_stats[trump_col] / tabulator_stats['total_votes'] \* 100
# Create subplots
fig, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(2, 1, figsize=(10, 8))
# Plot Harris histogram
ax1.hist(tabulator_stats['harris_pct'], bins=50, edgecolor='black', color='blue', alpha=0.7)
ax1.set_title('Distribution of Harris Votes by Tabulator (Early Voting Only)')
ax1.set_xlabel('Percentage of Votes for Harris')
ax1.set_ylabel('Number of Tabulators')
# Plot Trump histogram
ax2.hist(tabulator_stats['trump_pct'], bins=50, edgecolor='black', color='red', alpha=0.7)
ax2.set_title('Distribution of Trump Votes by Tabulator (Early Voting Only)')
ax2.set_xlabel('Percentage of Votes for Trump')
ax2.set_ylabel('Number of Tabulators')
plt.tight_layout()
plt.show()
This produces a figure identical (up to histogram bucketing) to the one at the end of the linked article.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Thank you! I've run the notebook and reproduced the histograms of the early votes. I'm grateful for you sharing your work. For the other commenters who have dismissed the analysis without providing details, I would recommend that you reproduce this notebook and dig in.
I'm writing this in response to the originator of this thread @beedeebeedee[1]. I'm posting it as a top-level comment because I believe it's applicable to the overall conversation.
> According to the theory, in fair elections, turnout indicators typically follow a regular graphical representation that resembles a bell shape. If anomalies appear in the data -- for example, forms different from the bell shape or the bell "grows a tail" -- this indicates unfair elections.
There is *no* respectable statistician who would *ever* draw a conclusion from data. You could say 'may indicate evidence of unfair elections,' but it is impossible to deem whether something occurred or not with 100% certainty.
Now to address their "indicators."
> While in cities the data representation mostly follows a bell shape, in the regions it is anomalously deviated
All statistics is just a representation of data, it tells us nothing of logic. Logic is also based in axioms and it's important to identify what those are.
Here the author is saying the data is "anomalously deviated" with the axiomatic assumption that all voters must follow the same distribution, but why should this assumption be held true? It ignores other logical factors that may sway these distributions.
If I'm a candidate for a political position that would give a rural precinct free money, wouldn't that heavily affect that population's voting outcomes? Surely what's said in a political campaign can sway these things, yet there's nothing in the article that mentions that.
> According to the theory, if a number of stations emerge where one candidate -- the "beneficiary" -- is unusually high, this might indicate falsification. There's a high risk of manipulation where increased overall voter turnout is reflected only in support of the "beneficiary."
So the belief is that because there are 2 distributions for the number of precincts with a certain percentage of "yes" votes, that automatically "indicates falsification"? There needs to be more information than this to make a conclusion. What one holds as axioms are a matter of opinion.
The only way to get something useful out of a counterargument to this is for a proponent to exhaustively list all the votes they think are legitimate, and for the opponent to show the same patterns can occur there as well.
Similarly for a proponent to convince detractors, they'd have to show that other elections they see as legitimate *never* indicate those patterns. Otherwise this is just an opinion piece on data.
> There is no respectable statistician who would ever draw a conclusion from data.
This is outright pedantry, but I'm willing to give the benefit of the doubt. Scientific research is literally the process of drawing conclusions from data, after repeated measurement and control of independent variables.
derangedHorse 33 days ago [-]
No benefit of the doubt is needed, I made a true statement, albeit a subjective one about who I consider "respectable".
To me, statisticians analyze data and make objective statements about what they see. The process of scientific research is a different beast altogether. The objective statements about the data can only be used to inspire or support an argument. The correctness of the argument can only be recognized if the listener is convinced.
z3c0 33 days ago [-]
I'm not sure I follow your idea that correctness emerges from belief, but that could get epistemological quickly.
What I can address is that the role of a statistician is to interpret the statements made by data towards the objective (an unobtainable notion), not vice versa. I don't know any statistician, myself included, who isn't aware of the limitations of sampling, and thus the impossibility of dealing in objectivity -- hence why conclusions are often posited in speculative terms, such as probabilities or even hypotheses. Having the ability to reach those conclusions from the recorded observations of real phenomena is why statisticians tend to operate within subject matters.
Towards that end, I do agree that any statistician worth their salt would not take too much at face value on a two dimensional chart, and that this whole matter bears more investigation. But the idea that no respectable statisticians draw conclusions from data... I'm left to assume that you respect no statisticians.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Hi derangedHorse, thanks for your insight. The anomaly is that there appears to be a heavy shift in votes only in (1) early voting, and not in (2) mail-in ballots or (3) Election Day voting. Additionally, the anomaly only appears for all tabulators after 300 or more votes are cast.
> There is no respectable statistician who would ever draw a conclusion from data. You could say 'may indicate evidence of unfair elections,' but it is impossible to deem whether something occurred or not with 100% certainty.
The originators of the analysis are claiming that this indicates manipulation. Perhaps they should have given more qualifiers in that image of their analysis, but the data is alarming and it is an up-hill battle even to get their analysis noticed (other than the press release to WCIA, only Newsweek has mentioned it). We can say 'maybe' but given the current political and media environment right now, it is likely that that qualification would have doomed their analysis from getting any coverage at all.
Here is a video from the group that discusses these issues and is worth watching because it speaks directly to your concerns and others: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOQ-GxJyJN4
"The pattern above shows an inexplicable spike in vote distribution that is statistically unlikely based on typical human voting behavior."
And while discussing alternate causes ("Deep Red" Areas)
"While such a deviation in the data could potentially still emerge, this does not explain why the pattern is limited to Early Voting, as in that scenario it would be reasonable to expect the same deviation to appear in Election Day results. Instead, Election Day results indicate a normal, expected variation."
derangedHorse 33 days ago [-]
6:11 I don't find this particularly strange. I think they'd make a much stronger argument if they showed the drop-off vote for 2020. I found it strange that they only picked 2012 and 2016 given my theory that drop-off votes are probably more prominent in controversial elections. Especially given the fact Kamala entered the race somewhat last minute. I also find it odd that there are no links to explore the previous years that were shown in the video from the website linked in the video's description [1].
10:10 Another claim of irregularity that doesn't quite support their conclusion. It seems they're indicating that both plots seem irregular, which I agree, but there thesis of fraud doesn't completely address 2020's case. They could say republican cheated in 2020 as well, but then they'd have to explain why this election went any different.
11:36 Here they're trying to support the irregularity of the data with anecdote. "Does this match from your opinion with the actual demographic there?" is not a methodical approach to figuring out what's wrong. Surely not every republican would be okay with fraudulent votes regardless of who won. A contrary voice in these video would lend some credence to their claims.
13:28 Voting against one's registered party also doesn't seem crazy to me as I've had many friends who have this past election. My own anecdote doesn't affect the data and may not sway arguments, nor does my theory of controversial elections breeding "irregular" results, but hopefully it can create an equally valid opinion than the one presented in the video.
15:05 If someone was rigging the election in what way? Any security model being claimed as breached needs to define what constitutes a break and how the attack could create that break in security.
16:30 I don't understand why a '2014 Wisonsin Gov. Race' (the title of the graph) is applicable here. Maybe she just used it as a lead-in for the next part?
18:37 Why is she bringing up the random distribution of inadvertent errors?
After spending about an hour watching the video and observing the results, I'm even more skeptical of their claims.
> 6:11 I don't find this particularly strange. I think they'd make a much stronger argument if they showed the drop-off vote for 2020. I found it strange that they only picked 2012 and 2016
It would have been nice to have 2020 there too, but they may not have had access to the data
> 10:10 Another claim of irregularity that doesn't quite support their conclusion. It seems they're indicating that both plots seem irregular, which I agree, but there thesis of fraud doesn't completely address 2020's case. They could say republican cheated in 2020 as well, but then they'd have to explain why this election went any different.
A possible explanation as to why 2020 cheating failed and 2024 did not could be that the cheating was not able to overcome how unpopular he was for his handling of Covid and other issues. For the cheating to work, it cannot be obvious and therefore must be limited. Conversely, Kamala was not as popular in 2024 as Biden was in 2020, so the cheating was successful.
Alternatively, in Trump's own words, Elon made the difference in 2024: "He knows those computers better than anybody. All those computers. Those vote-counting computers," Trump told the crowd. "And we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide." https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-elon-musk-voting-machi...
It could be that whoever was doing the cheating did not have the resources to enact it as successfully without Elon's support (Starlink, Shaotran, etc).
> 11:36 Here they're trying to support the irregularity of the data with anecdote.
> 13:28 Voting against one's registered party also doesn't seem crazy to me
Right, anecdotal evidence and the irregularity of voting against your registered party are not conclusive evidence, but do add to the consensus that a more systematic analysis needs to be done.
> 15:05 If someone was rigging the election in what way? Any security model being claimed as breached needs to define what constitutes a break and how the attack could create that break in security.
That is exactly one of the next steps that should be taken. Figure out how it could have been done, now that there is evidence that points to irregularities. The possibility does not prove it happened, but it would then help go towards the further step of trying to find evidence that it did (once we know where to look and what for).
> 16:30 I don't understand why a '2014 Wisonsin Gov. Race' (the title of the graph) is applicable here. Maybe she just used it as a lead-in for the next part?
She is showing the percentage of the cumulative summation of votes. She has data for the 2014 Wisconsin race that is categorized based on the type of the voting machines. The green line and purple line are relatively flat, showing that the percentage of votes did not change significantly based on the number of cumulative votes. The red lines are suspicious because the percentage grows significantly after a few thousand votes. I'm not sure why they used a line graph instead of a scatterplot, but presumably they fit a line to the data for each machine.
> 18:37 Why is she bringing up the random distribution of inadvertent errors?
She's bringing it up to point out that it could not be caused by random errors (i.e., human errors caused by the election workers, etc), because random errors would be randomly distributed and produce roughly a flat line. The red lines aren't flat, so they are not contributing to the gain in votes.
Look at the graphs at 19:00 and 20:00 for Clark County, NV 2024 early voting. They both show increases in the percentage rate for Trump after around 300 votes for each machine. As one of the speakers says,
"If we're stuffing a bunch of tabulators at 60% for Trump, then we're going to get an asymptote at 60%," which is visible in the data for Clark County, NV in 2024
Thank you for bringing up your points, because after watching the video and with your criticism in mind, addressing them made me more confident that we need a comprehensive investigation to follow this lead. If their claim is correct, it is unlikely that we will see that investigation led by the Federal government, but citizens and states can take the lead.
LorenPechtel 33 days ago [-]
The real cheating has been in throwing up roadblocks to voting. The Felon didn't win either time, it's just he was successful enough at suppressing Democrat votes that he "won". Since the fraud isn't at the ballot box no examination of the voting will reveal it. Rather, you have to poll the people as to why they didn't vote--didn't want to or were prevented from doing so.
Blackstrat 33 days ago [-]
Much more honest and thorough mathematical analyzes were performed on the 2020 election, some by major academic organizations. They showed far more suspicious patterns than this. If Trump or his associates were going to "hack" the election, Clack County NV wouldn't be where they did it. That's the old Harry Reid machine. It would be conspicuous. Harris was a bad candidate. Her VP choice was worse. Her campaign skills were lacking. Democrats lost because they deserted the working class. I grew up in a union family that voted democrat. The current party no longer resembles that party. The republicans, at least under Trump, do. When Trump is gone, another Bush type could arise, and then again the middle class will be without a party. That's why Harris lost.
generalizations 34 days ago [-]
Is this going to be something we deal with after each election now? This just sounds like the 2020 election fraud conspiracies all over again.
defrost 33 days ago [-]
The 2020 fraud stories involved Asian source bamboo paper, unverified claims of dumping mail in ballots, claims of many multiple voting people, dead voters ressurected, ... lots of claims that collapsed for want of any evidence despite being the kinds of claims that should be provable.
This is a simple statement of statistical pattern weirdness in the bulk voting record of a county.
I'm in Australia, I have a geostatistical and epidemiology background using such things to find valuable mineral deposits and early signs of unusual diseases.
The statements made here are far more convincing of actual fraud than the 2020 claims .. if this repeats across many county's then it becomes more and more certain.
If it's no more than a blip in a single county then it's just one of those things, for it to be fraud there would have to be similar patterns in multiple counties in swing states.
The future then is a right old bucket of worms.
digitaltrees 33 days ago [-]
This is not coming from the Harris campaign. Seems like a material difference. Also a hit repo of the technology to do exactly the thing showing up in the data and then the author directly tied to the winning candidate is something that would be relevant in court. The 2020 court cases never had anything remotely close to that level of credibility. They are a joke.
beedeebeedee 34 days ago [-]
There was no evidence found of fraud during the 2020 election despite being contested and audited. This is evidence that is being discovered now, because the election was not contested by the losing candidate in 2024 and was not audited.
Izkata 33 days ago [-]
> and audited
Assuming it was actually audited. The one I'm most aware of (one of the Arizona counties) was called an audit, but it wasn't an audit - it was a recount.
roenxi 33 days ago [-]
When looking at the sheer amount of money and power concentrated in the US government it doesn't make a lot of sense that the elections are consistently free of fraud.
It is a bit like the weird jump in scandals out of politics between the pre-internet era and now. It turns out that the press just didn't report on a lot of things. Voter fraud will be similar, as the data becomes more public and people start coordinating more effectively a lot of dross is probably going to get turned up.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
I think it'd be great if the security of every election were vigorously tested.
engineer_22 33 days ago [-]
Yeah, 2016 was the same "Russia" etc.
We've got some issues to deal with
stefantalpalaru 33 days ago [-]
[dead]
aaron695 33 days ago [-]
[dead]
cycrutchfield 34 days ago [-]
[flagged]
jemmyw 34 days ago [-]
Don't know, this seems both important and of technical interest.
z3c0 33 days ago [-]
If Occam's Razor is of any value here, there are likely many more Trump voters on Hacker News than one might expect.
washadjeffmad 33 days ago [-]
Applied correctly, either every credible outlet excepting this one with the capacity to monitor and detect election fraud was busy during one of the most contentious races in modern US history, or nothing was missed and the convenient outlier can be dismissed as that.
The better explanation is probably that people who were annoyed by having to listen to dubious claims of voter and election fraud over the past four years are using this thread to give others a taste of their own medicine.
I didn't flag, so whatever.
loeg 33 days ago [-]
Extraordinary claims like this need a lot more substantiation to be news. As-is, this is just some crazy person yelling at the clouds. We don't need to amplify that.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
> Extraordinary claims like this need a lot more substantiation to be news
That's the point of having this discussion (and not flagging, ridiculing and suppressing it). It will take some time and attention to scrutinize both the analysis and the software.
xyst 33 days ago [-]
[flagged]
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
The election is our nation's most sacred element. If it turns out that the party in power manipulated the results at all then, yes, there will be pitchforks.
specialist 33 days ago [-]
Yes but: Gore v Bush
Aside: As you likely already know, Voter Action proved in court that Kerry won New Mexico. As in "got more votes" than Bush.
They chose NM, to make their point about electronic voting, because NM's electoral votes (alone) wouldn't change the outcome.
The chicanery in other states was much more blatant. eg Ohio. Alas, that lawsuit was abruptly ended when all the evidence was destroyed, despite the court ordered retention. (IIRC, that plantiff was Green Party candidate Codd.)
So it goes.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
Somehow people are 100% ok with the right-wing ratfucking which has become typical.
But the current accusations are a completely different level.
specialist 32 days ago [-]
Andrew Gumbel's theory is that since "the left" obviously cheats (despite lack of evidence), "the right" feels justified in cheating harder.
More likely is that "the right" believes any "the left" victory is intrinsically illegitimate. So ratfucking is necessary to correct any "aberation".
Even more likely, for a while now, "the right" is simply anti-democratic and is purely animated by their will to power. Therefore, rules are for suckers.
NewJazz 33 days ago [-]
Pitchforks will get you put in ~~a concenctration camp~~ CECOT.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
Has this been happening?
NewJazz 33 days ago [-]
Has anyone rebelled violently en masse?
jandrewrogers 33 days ago [-]
This is a pretty inexperienced analysis.
I happened to have detailed day-by-day voting and registration data for the 2024 Nevada election as it was happening. Harris losing Nevada was telegraphed in the data almost from the beginning. Forget the top line totals, the underlying structure of where and who was registering and voting in real-time made the outcome all but a foregone conclusion weeks before the actual election. Nevada was some of the easiest money on the prediction markets.
Much is explained by an unusually robust turnout of low-propensity voters for Trump. They often don't care about the rest of the ballot, so it skews results albeit in a predictable way. (This is also the risk for Republicans; they are unlikely to show up for mid-terms and may sit on the sidelines again in four years.)
Nevada has consistently clean election processes. I am only aware of a single anomaly over the last several Federal elections that was clearly inexplicable. It wasn't this election, that instance looked like a system failure rather than fraud, and it didn't change the outcome. Some other States are rife with anomalies that persist even with sophisticated analysis most cycles.
If I was going to pick a State to look for Federal election irregularities, Nevada would be pretty low on my list. It is easy for amateurs to fool themselves into thinking they've found election fraud when really they just don't understand what is required to find a signal that holds up under sophisticated analysis. Same thing happened in 2020.
I also used to live in Nevada and am pretty attuned to the local politics. There are local bellwether statistics that are traditionally pretty reliable for indicating how an election will break. Harris was upside down on these too. The tortured rationalization by Nevada election pundits like Jon Ralston to reinterpret those as "good actually" was uncritically repeated widely in the national media.
beedeebeedee 33 days ago [-]
Another commenter posted a colab notebook and created a histogram that shows the "Russian tail". Please at least copy and paste it, and show where they have gone wrong with their statistical analysis, instead of making uncited and subjective judgments.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
Maybe you can write this up with charts? Or at least put your data up publicly?
jandrewrogers 33 days ago [-]
The data sources are public and downloadable from official sources. In the case of the State of Nevada, the total data set resolves to upwards of a hundred URLs that are not neatly organized anywhere, so there is a lot manual work to aggregate them and data engineer a single coherent data model.
I stay out of the analysis business though I know a lot about it. A friend has been hardcore in the business for over a decade as a side-hustle and drags me into it every 2-4 years to help out with data sourcing and anomaly forensics, which are more my specialty. The workload during election season is insane but you can make a mountain of money from the campaigns if you have an excellent reputation for this kind of analytic work. Most people that try botch it.
The polling used in the news media is mostly unserious. The campaigns use more sophisticated non-public voting models to predict outcomes and that has risen in stature with time versus polls. Even if the public may be surprised by the outcome a well-run campaign typically is not.
rcpt 33 days ago [-]
Ok but it sounds like you're sitting on top of something very important. And also that you've already done all the analysis? Seems like you should publish.
> EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
> NOTE: This content is not written by or endorsed by "WCIA/WCIX", its advertisers, or Nexstar Media Inc.
This isn't news, it's a paid press release.
That is better to scrutinize than the press release.
The statistics, graphs, and conclusions don’t make any sense.
https://www.einpresswire.com/ai/press-release-generator
This could literally be AI fantasy. Shame on whoever created this.
I think it's valid criticism to say that you should have taken a closer look before submitting, and concluded that it was too junky for HN. In which case the flagging is appropriate.
nice mind reading skills over there
the idea we can't discuss it is the most scandalous of all, IMO, especially given we are just bunch of nerds discussing shit.
They're sharing their opinion; no proofs to be found anywhere, nor evidences.
> Trying to repress discussion is the opposite of soberly analyzing divisive topics
In your opinion, right? Because under mathematical logic, the opposite of "repressing discussion" is "encouraging discussion", nothing less, nothing more.
Suppose there's a divisive topic that is posted on a forum with mostly common or at least topic-unaligned appeal. Stands to reason then that most discussion on that topic will be of low quality, since again, the community on the forum is not well-aligned to debate on the matter, right? That is the reasoning behind their opinion I'd imagine, and I can definitely agree with this personally.
And while inevitably there would be a minority of people who are well equipped to engage the topic productively, even if they post and their posts gain traction, the discussions around them will be nevertheless low quality - I think this prediction is agreeable as well at least.
Note also that nowhere in this model is the intent of the participants represented anywhere. So even though your intent is commendable:
> would encourage you to dig in and practice curiosity and open discussion
... it nevertheless misses the point. You're also (supposedly) asking for topically better aligned minds to put themselves through the torture of engaging those (supposedly) overwhelmingly not, both in the sense that they're (supposedly) super not capable, and in the sense that (supposedly) there are a lot more of them in here than not.
This is further supported how for example in this thread you exercised what I refer to as mind reading in both of the comments I've seen from you.
Example #[1]:
> and therefore tried to flag to repress discussion of it
They said that they flagged it because it's:
> too junky
... not because they're trying to repress discussion of it. Naturally, I do recognize that the post getting flagged would prevent further discussion of it, but it is both dishonest to say that they did it with that goal in mind (their goal is in their mind, which you cannot read) and also just completely untrue (in my opinion).
Example #[2]:
> so you are attempting to prove your point
In this scenario you're telling them what they're doing, which is again something only they can know. You only really know what you think they're doing, but that is not what you're saying. Consider the following alternative:
> so I think that goes directly against your point.
Note the "I think" part.
These are both very standout signs (for me at least) that quality discourse, especially on divisive topics, would not be possible with you. I further think that this is true for many other people as well, in most of the threads here. I highly question if it is possible to do with me as well, particularly in specific topics, and with consistency. I'd go as far as to say that with random people, on the internet, it is essentially impossible to have productive discussion on divisive matters, if it is even a possibility at all, ever.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42996747
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42996763
this was removed from the front page, spot 3 when i saw it, yesterday due to these flags.
so to defend the claim someone didn't do exactly what they did - and worked - is a bit awkward to me
It's also not what I pointed at to be an opinion, but this:
> This is not a forum for original research. Additionally, this community is not well-equipped for sober analysis of divisive topics.
Interesting thing to point out nonetheless, will mull it over.
> due to these flags
I do not believe this can be established. I further find it very unlikely that people would flag a post decidedly because this specific downvoted person encouraged them to.
> to defend the claim someone didn't do exactly what they did
This is not a claim that was posted in the comments I was replying to, and so it's impossible for me to be defending it. I take you mean why am I defending the people who flagged the post and have encouraged others to do so - ignoring that this defending behavior is completely perceptual on your end, I wrote what I did because the reading that "they did it so that it would prevent discussion" is a different one, is implying more than the former, and I believe is strongly misleading and conspiratorial as a result.
What? No...
I think it would have been better if you'd left your follow-up comment [1] when flagging. (FWIW I agree with your reasoning.) Flagging without comment was counterproductive, as it spawned a second submission from folks suspicious of why the first one was flagged.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42995880
https://github.com/DevrathIyer/ballotproof/tree/master
Apparently, Shaotran removed his name from the repo and is now listed as a private user, but it can be found in the archive of the devpost page linked from the repo: https://devpost.com/software/ballotproof-vision
https://web.archive.org/web/20250204131222/https://devpost.c...
Info from: https://bsky.app/profile/cartwright776.bsky.social/post/3lhr...
Could this be used to spoof the results, and are there artifacts that could be discovered to directly link it or rule it out?
Here is an image from the Election Truth Alliance analysis that shows a possible artifact: https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/9087f51c-d3bd-4002-9943-797...
PDF of their analysis: https://electiontruthalliance.org/clark-county%2C-nv
I don't really understand how would opens source software that checks the validity of ballots, or even generate fake ballots help in committing election fraud? The hard part is getting the fake ballot to the counting location, how the fake ballots is made, be it by machine or by hand is not particularly relevant, anyone can do that.
EDIT: posted my concern on bsky https://bsky.app/profile/patcon.bsky.social/post/3lhrwuw6dy2...
But that this skill set gets you into E's inner circle definitely goes onto the ever-growing pile of circumstantial evidence that something is not right.
Yes I will conceed that all this talk is circumstantial. It's like Lab Leak (even the desire to gaslight anyone who talks about it)
The word "objectively" does a lot of work here, and most of it is unpaid. Every election has irregularities, and every election has the losing side casting suspicions around. No, I literally mean every single one. We have search engines now. Just go and look up. It's literally every time.
Sometimes, those suspicions turn true - there are really people who conduct fraud in elections, in various ways. Most often, though, those suspicions are thrown around by partisans unable to comprehend how their side, being obviously morally superior, the only sane side and widely popular, still lost the election. In other words, they are just junk. Without a substantial evidence base, any amount of them do not constitute any evidentiary base. Zero times millions is still the same zero.
> people with expertise in generating ballots
Did you ever actually see a real US election ballot? Generating something like that is beyond trivial. There are many official sites that just let you download a sample ballot. Even if that ballot is somehow modified from the actual one in subtle ways, the actual one is quite simple too. It may be a problem to get the paper exactly right if they check that, but having the code to generate a ballot does not help you there in any way. And also generating something like that would be pretty useless by itself, if you have electoral fraud in mind, because the problem is not producing the paper, it's getting it into the system and getting it counted and not getting caught while doing that.
Summarily, this "expertise" does not enable you in any non-trivial way to perpetrate election fraud, and does not make any hard part of that any easier. Also, you can find people with such expertise - and better - at any design and print shop. They can reproduce any of it - and much more complex designs - without any problem, that's literally what they do all day.
> Yes I will conceed that all this talk is circumstantial.
No, "circumstantial" is way too generous a word for this. "Empty fantasies" is more fitting.
Since Trump is extremely concerned about election security I’m sure he will send teams of people to investigate these anomalies.
https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2023/12/politics/missing-rus...
Link to the full report: https://electiontruthalliance.org/clark-county%2C-nv
At the end of the full report, there are two histograms of the vote shares earned by Harris and by Trump, respectively, overlaid by a gaussian ("normal") distribution. Election shares tend to follow gaussian distributions [1]. In Clark County, NV, the election shares have a strong discontinuity that favors Trump, but only in Early Voting results.
This discontinuity only appears to exist on machines that tabulated a lot of results.
Past elections that are suspected to have been fraudulent (a few in Russia and one in Uganda, prior to 2012) show these exact same types of discontinuities, whereas elections that are generally regarded as secure do not show these types of discontinuities [1].
Are there other potential explanations for these discontinuities? ("Russian Tails" as they are colloquially known [2].) Yes! Election Truth Alliance lists them out as any proper data scientist would. Furthermore, ETA lists and links their datasets, and invites anyone to use them. This is what a model data scientist should do.
It seems that they are trying to get more data from more contested areas. What will they find? I don't know, but it seems that the more this phenomenon presents itself, then some of the alternate hypotheses can be ruled out.
[1] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3478593/
[2] https://www.rferl.org/a/georgia-election-manipulation-russia... *[Interesting that Elon wants to get rid of Radio Free Europe. -ed]
The analysis here is using publicly available data and they are pointing out statistical properties of that data that they say are highly indicative of manipulation. They are giving enough information for outside statisticians and others to reproduce their work.
This is not at all comparable to most of the claims after the 2020 election. The closest comparable claims in 2020 were some of the claims based on some vote distributions in some districts not obeying Benford's law. Those didn't hold up because given the demographics of those districts Benford's law would not be expected to hold.
(I wrote a web-based simple simulation using data from one of the states that the people basing claims on Benford's law were using in order to illustrate how much the distribution could differ from a Benford distribution. Anyone curious can find it here [1]. There's a link on that page to run it).
[1] https://github.com/tzs/georgia-benford-simulation
But this time around it's not going to face honest scrutiny in the courts so they won't have to admit they have nothing.
"But there's evidence this time and there wasn't in 2020!" Well, the other side would argue the opposite. We're not going to get anywhere this way.
Look: regardless of the the extent to which these alleged voting shenanigans are real, we need to fix the system. The legitimacy of the state is at risk.
Just as Caesar's wife must be above reproach, our voting system must be above reproach. There are plenty of common sense things officials can take to bolster the public's faith in the system. For example, we should ban electronic voting machines. The real threat to democracy isn't election manipulation but officials who refuse to enact measures that would dispel even the appearance of manipulation.
It is absolutely not the position of mainstream Democrats that the 2024 election was rigged, invalid etc. This ETA organization (founded December) is some fringe weirdo and doesn't represent dems.
The people claiming election interference in 2020 had every chance to provide any piece of evidence, and they never could.
It's reasonable for all of us to expect that the election was secure, with a very high degree of certainty. When people aren't willing to consider the possibility of shenanigans, or that the systems* we're using might be insecure, we shouldn't be surprised that people are unwilling to do the democratic thing and accept the winner.
*by "system", I don't just mean the voting machines themselves, but also the whole process surrounding the collection and tallying of votes.
I shouldn't spend time on this but it seems from context you think that word means "bullshit" and it doesn't. I'm sorry for pointing it out but it bothers me.
> "But there's evidence this time and there wasn't in 2020!" Well, the other side would argue the opposite. We're not going to get anywhere this way.
We might be able to by actually looking at the evidence. This is a really common problem I see among people who through good intentions avoid controversial topics.
Sure scientists say the moon is real, but Keith on Facebook says it's a hologram. I guess we should rule out any evidence from the entire field of astronomy until they can dispel even the appearance of misinformation.
( "random" here means more chaotic and unpredictable )
after which there was a more correlated bias toward one candidate that had a stong early trend toward a particular outcome (consistent clumping with little bounce).
The assertion is that this rarely seen in "real free voting data".
In a single picture: https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/9087f51c-d3bd-4002-9943-797...
These analysts acknowledge the "deep red areas" explanation in their pdf, but they handwave it away in an unconvincing way: they say that the same effect doesn't occur for election day voting, only the early vote. But most voting in Nevada doesn't happen on Election Day. According to the data they present, every single voting machine in Clark County processed less than 150 election-day votes, with most well under 100. That is, they'd all be well to the left of the dotted line. So even in the vote-manipulation scenario, these analysts should expect to be seeing no separation effect for the election-day vote. Its absence tells us nothing.
It seems that you're suggesting some fairly obvious factors working against Harris weren't considered by an organization whose entire purpose is to sniff out voter fraud. Are you suggesting that they overlooked such an obvious detail, or that they're willfully ignoring it?
It is not "literally numerology", that's just hyperbole on your part.
None of your comments in this thread have had any substance, just repetition of the same "gut feeling" opinion.
https://www.newsweek.com/2024-election-rigged-donald-trump-e...
https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-elon-musk-voting-machi...
Regardless of the ETA's analysis, or the DOGE employees ballot software, that comment by Trump on its own raises the suspicion that this should be investigated and not immediately flagged, downvoted and dismissed
For others who don't know what the "Russian tail" is, here is the link within the PDF: https://www.rferl.org/a/georgia-election-manipulation-russia...
> According to the theory, in fair elections, turnout indicators typically follow a regular graphical representation that resembles a bell shape. If anomalies appear in the data -- for example, forms different from the bell shape or the bell "grows a tail" -- this indicates unfair elections.
There is *no* respectable statistician who would *ever* draw a conclusion from data. You could say 'may indicate evidence of unfair elections,' but it is impossible to deem whether something occurred or not with 100% certainty.
Now to address their "indicators."
> While in cities the data representation mostly follows a bell shape, in the regions it is anomalously deviated
All statistics is just a representation of data, it tells us nothing of logic. Logic is also based in axioms and it's important to identify what those are.
Here the author is saying the data is "anomalously deviated" with the axiomatic assumption that all voters must follow the same distribution, but why should this assumption be held true? It ignores other logical factors that may sway these distributions.
If I'm a candidate for a political position that would give a rural precinct free money, wouldn't that heavily affect that population's voting outcomes? Surely what's said in a political campaign can sway these things, yet there's nothing in the article that mentions that.
> According to the theory, if a number of stations emerge where one candidate -- the "beneficiary" -- is unusually high, this might indicate falsification. There's a high risk of manipulation where increased overall voter turnout is reflected only in support of the "beneficiary."
So the belief is that because there are 2 distributions for the number of precincts with a certain percentage of "yes" votes, that automatically "indicates falsification"? There needs to be more information than this to make a conclusion. What one holds as axioms are a matter of opinion.
The only way to get something useful out of a counterargument to this is for a proponent to exhaustively list all the votes they think are legitimate, and for the opponent to show the same patterns can occur there as well.
Similarly for a proponent to convince detractors, they'd have to show that other elections they see as legitimate *never* indicate those patterns. Otherwise this is just an opinion piece on data.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42996898
This is outright pedantry, but I'm willing to give the benefit of the doubt. Scientific research is literally the process of drawing conclusions from data, after repeated measurement and control of independent variables.
To me, statisticians analyze data and make objective statements about what they see. The process of scientific research is a different beast altogether. The objective statements about the data can only be used to inspire or support an argument. The correctness of the argument can only be recognized if the listener is convinced.
What I can address is that the role of a statistician is to interpret the statements made by data towards the objective (an unobtainable notion), not vice versa. I don't know any statistician, myself included, who isn't aware of the limitations of sampling, and thus the impossibility of dealing in objectivity -- hence why conclusions are often posited in speculative terms, such as probabilities or even hypotheses. Having the ability to reach those conclusions from the recorded observations of real phenomena is why statisticians tend to operate within subject matters.
Towards that end, I do agree that any statistician worth their salt would not take too much at face value on a two dimensional chart, and that this whole matter bears more investigation. But the idea that no respectable statisticians draw conclusions from data... I'm left to assume that you respect no statisticians.
Here's the image that represents the anomaly in early voting: https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/9087f51c-d3bd-4002-9943-797...
> There is no respectable statistician who would ever draw a conclusion from data. You could say 'may indicate evidence of unfair elections,' but it is impossible to deem whether something occurred or not with 100% certainty.
The originators of the analysis are claiming that this indicates manipulation. Perhaps they should have given more qualifiers in that image of their analysis, but the data is alarming and it is an up-hill battle even to get their analysis noticed (other than the press release to WCIA, only Newsweek has mentioned it). We can say 'maybe' but given the current political and media environment right now, it is likely that that qualification would have doomed their analysis from getting any coverage at all.
Here is a video from the group that discusses these issues and is worth watching because it speaks directly to your concerns and others: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOQ-GxJyJN4
Edit: I haven't fully absorbed their analysis, so I've gone back and they do make those qualifications to the data ("Data Suggestive of Vote Manipulation", etc) within the PDF: https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/9087f51c-d3bd-4002-9943-797...
"The pattern above shows an inexplicable spike in vote distribution that is statistically unlikely based on typical human voting behavior."
And while discussing alternate causes ("Deep Red" Areas) "While such a deviation in the data could potentially still emerge, this does not explain why the pattern is limited to Early Voting, as in that scenario it would be reasonable to expect the same deviation to appear in Election Day results. Instead, Election Day results indicate a normal, expected variation."
10:10 Another claim of irregularity that doesn't quite support their conclusion. It seems they're indicating that both plots seem irregular, which I agree, but there thesis of fraud doesn't completely address 2020's case. They could say republican cheated in 2020 as well, but then they'd have to explain why this election went any different.
11:36 Here they're trying to support the irregularity of the data with anecdote. "Does this match from your opinion with the actual demographic there?" is not a methodical approach to figuring out what's wrong. Surely not every republican would be okay with fraudulent votes regardless of who won. A contrary voice in these video would lend some credence to their claims.
13:28 Voting against one's registered party also doesn't seem crazy to me as I've had many friends who have this past election. My own anecdote doesn't affect the data and may not sway arguments, nor does my theory of controversial elections breeding "irregular" results, but hopefully it can create an equally valid opinion than the one presented in the video.
15:05 If someone was rigging the election in what way? Any security model being claimed as breached needs to define what constitutes a break and how the attack could create that break in security.
16:30 I don't understand why a '2014 Wisonsin Gov. Race' (the title of the graph) is applicable here. Maybe she just used it as a lead-in for the next part?
18:37 Why is she bringing up the random distribution of inadvertent errors?
After spending about an hour watching the video and observing the results, I'm even more skeptical of their claims.
[1] https://smartelections.us/dropoff
It would have been nice to have 2020 there too, but they may not have had access to the data
> 10:10 Another claim of irregularity that doesn't quite support their conclusion. It seems they're indicating that both plots seem irregular, which I agree, but there thesis of fraud doesn't completely address 2020's case. They could say republican cheated in 2020 as well, but then they'd have to explain why this election went any different.
A possible explanation as to why 2020 cheating failed and 2024 did not could be that the cheating was not able to overcome how unpopular he was for his handling of Covid and other issues. For the cheating to work, it cannot be obvious and therefore must be limited. Conversely, Kamala was not as popular in 2024 as Biden was in 2020, so the cheating was successful.
Alternatively, in Trump's own words, Elon made the difference in 2024: "He knows those computers better than anybody. All those computers. Those vote-counting computers," Trump told the crowd. "And we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide." https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-elon-musk-voting-machi...
It could be that whoever was doing the cheating did not have the resources to enact it as successfully without Elon's support (Starlink, Shaotran, etc).
> 11:36 Here they're trying to support the irregularity of the data with anecdote. > 13:28 Voting against one's registered party also doesn't seem crazy to me
Right, anecdotal evidence and the irregularity of voting against your registered party are not conclusive evidence, but do add to the consensus that a more systematic analysis needs to be done.
> 15:05 If someone was rigging the election in what way? Any security model being claimed as breached needs to define what constitutes a break and how the attack could create that break in security.
That is exactly one of the next steps that should be taken. Figure out how it could have been done, now that there is evidence that points to irregularities. The possibility does not prove it happened, but it would then help go towards the further step of trying to find evidence that it did (once we know where to look and what for).
> 16:30 I don't understand why a '2014 Wisonsin Gov. Race' (the title of the graph) is applicable here. Maybe she just used it as a lead-in for the next part?
She is showing the percentage of the cumulative summation of votes. She has data for the 2014 Wisconsin race that is categorized based on the type of the voting machines. The green line and purple line are relatively flat, showing that the percentage of votes did not change significantly based on the number of cumulative votes. The red lines are suspicious because the percentage grows significantly after a few thousand votes. I'm not sure why they used a line graph instead of a scatterplot, but presumably they fit a line to the data for each machine.
> 18:37 Why is she bringing up the random distribution of inadvertent errors?
She's bringing it up to point out that it could not be caused by random errors (i.e., human errors caused by the election workers, etc), because random errors would be randomly distributed and produce roughly a flat line. The red lines aren't flat, so they are not contributing to the gain in votes.
Look at the graphs at 19:00 and 20:00 for Clark County, NV 2024 early voting. They both show increases in the percentage rate for Trump after around 300 votes for each machine. As one of the speakers says,
"If we're stuffing a bunch of tabulators at 60% for Trump, then we're going to get an asymptote at 60%," which is visible in the data for Clark County, NV in 2024
Thank you for bringing up your points, because after watching the video and with your criticism in mind, addressing them made me more confident that we need a comprehensive investigation to follow this lead. If their claim is correct, it is unlikely that we will see that investigation led by the Federal government, but citizens and states can take the lead.
This is a simple statement of statistical pattern weirdness in the bulk voting record of a county.
I'm in Australia, I have a geostatistical and epidemiology background using such things to find valuable mineral deposits and early signs of unusual diseases.
The statements made here are far more convincing of actual fraud than the 2020 claims .. if this repeats across many county's then it becomes more and more certain.
If it's no more than a blip in a single county then it's just one of those things, for it to be fraud there would have to be similar patterns in multiple counties in swing states.
The future then is a right old bucket of worms.
Assuming it was actually audited. The one I'm most aware of (one of the Arizona counties) was called an audit, but it wasn't an audit - it was a recount.
It is a bit like the weird jump in scandals out of politics between the pre-internet era and now. It turns out that the press just didn't report on a lot of things. Voter fraud will be similar, as the data becomes more public and people start coordinating more effectively a lot of dross is probably going to get turned up.
We've got some issues to deal with
The better explanation is probably that people who were annoyed by having to listen to dubious claims of voter and election fraud over the past four years are using this thread to give others a taste of their own medicine.
I didn't flag, so whatever.
That's the point of having this discussion (and not flagging, ridiculing and suppressing it). It will take some time and attention to scrutinize both the analysis and the software.
Aside: As you likely already know, Voter Action proved in court that Kerry won New Mexico. As in "got more votes" than Bush.
They chose NM, to make their point about electronic voting, because NM's electoral votes (alone) wouldn't change the outcome.
The chicanery in other states was much more blatant. eg Ohio. Alas, that lawsuit was abruptly ended when all the evidence was destroyed, despite the court ordered retention. (IIRC, that plantiff was Green Party candidate Codd.)
So it goes.
But the current accusations are a completely different level.
There's probably some truth to that theory.
Steal This Vote [2005] https://www.amazon.com/Steal-This-Vote-Elections-Democracy/d...
More likely is that "the right" believes any "the left" victory is intrinsically illegitimate. So ratfucking is necessary to correct any "aberation".
Even more likely, for a while now, "the right" is simply anti-democratic and is purely animated by their will to power. Therefore, rules are for suckers.
I happened to have detailed day-by-day voting and registration data for the 2024 Nevada election as it was happening. Harris losing Nevada was telegraphed in the data almost from the beginning. Forget the top line totals, the underlying structure of where and who was registering and voting in real-time made the outcome all but a foregone conclusion weeks before the actual election. Nevada was some of the easiest money on the prediction markets.
Much is explained by an unusually robust turnout of low-propensity voters for Trump. They often don't care about the rest of the ballot, so it skews results albeit in a predictable way. (This is also the risk for Republicans; they are unlikely to show up for mid-terms and may sit on the sidelines again in four years.)
Nevada has consistently clean election processes. I am only aware of a single anomaly over the last several Federal elections that was clearly inexplicable. It wasn't this election, that instance looked like a system failure rather than fraud, and it didn't change the outcome. Some other States are rife with anomalies that persist even with sophisticated analysis most cycles.
If I was going to pick a State to look for Federal election irregularities, Nevada would be pretty low on my list. It is easy for amateurs to fool themselves into thinking they've found election fraud when really they just don't understand what is required to find a signal that holds up under sophisticated analysis. Same thing happened in 2020.
I also used to live in Nevada and am pretty attuned to the local politics. There are local bellwether statistics that are traditionally pretty reliable for indicating how an election will break. Harris was upside down on these too. The tortured rationalization by Nevada election pundits like Jon Ralston to reinterpret those as "good actually" was uncritically repeated widely in the national media.
I stay out of the analysis business though I know a lot about it. A friend has been hardcore in the business for over a decade as a side-hustle and drags me into it every 2-4 years to help out with data sourcing and anomaly forensics, which are more my specialty. The workload during election season is insane but you can make a mountain of money from the campaigns if you have an excellent reputation for this kind of analytic work. Most people that try botch it.
The polling used in the news media is mostly unserious. The campaigns use more sophisticated non-public voting models to predict outcomes and that has risen in stature with time versus polls. Even if the public may be surprised by the outcome a well-run campaign typically is not.