A 2013 Buzzfeed article noted numerous times the show was spot on when it came to worldwide events, which included faulty
voting machines changing peoples» votes, Siegfried & Roy's tiger turning on the duo, yard work becoming a video game, the Apple Watch and more.
Not exact matches
When people think about a cyber attack on election day they are most likely to think of hacking into
voting machines and
changing the results of an election.
The primary results came after a day marred by problems with the old lever
voting machines and other issues including last - minute
changes to polling sites and voters» names not appearing on official rolls.
The commissioners also discussed the possibility Tuesday of calling on Albany to
change state rules to allow the city to equip its
voting machines with wireless capabilities, so that results could be transmitted directly from
machines to the board without needing to transport memory sticks or ballots.
They didn't hack into the
voting machines to
change the
vote tallies and
votes are still cast by Americans.
But it was unclear if the increased margin would
change the stance his opponent had taken, which was to wait until
machine votes are recounted and absentee ballots are opened before conceding defeat.
Elections officials in the five - county district began a recanvass of
voting machines on Tuesday, which yielded no
changes after a review in Albany and Schenectady counties.
With just a little inside knowledge of a
machine, a rogue programmer could create a Trojan horse program that looks like useful code but surreptitiously
changes votes from one candidate to another.
With recent reports of malfunctioning voter
machines and uncounted
votes during primaries in Florida, Maryland, and elsewhere, reformers are once again clamoring for extensive
changes.
The
machines that are the most successful at doing this at any given time and circumstance are supreme: images that «break the Internet,» that
change policies and sway
votes, that «create» social behavior.
Standouts include Carrie Mae Weems» holographic narrative about race, sex, and politics portrayed by ghostly characters on a burlesque stage; The Propeller Group's video that draws parallels between funeral practices in Vietnam and New Orleans, along with the collective's sculptures of tricked - out musical instruments, which were also photographed with members of Louisiana marching bands; Glenn Kaino's installation of water tanks that turn military
machines into coral reefs; Jean - Michel Basquiat's paintings and works on paper that reference the cultural legacy of the Mississippi Delta and the South; Camille Henrot's video exploration of the universe by way of the storage rooms of the Smithsonian Institution; Tavares Strachan's 100 - foot long neon sign declaring «You belong here» from a barge on the Mississippi River; and Andrea Fraser's monologue, in which she recreated a heated debate by New Orleans city council members during a 1991
vote to racially integrate the Mardi Gras krewes —
changing her voice and expression as she dynamically alternated between speakers, both black and white.