When all the votes are counted this year, Americans should have far more confidence their votes were tallied correctly than in 2016.
After that contest was upended by Russian interference, states vastly increased the number of votes that are cast with paper records that can be audited later. More than 90 percent of votes will have a paper record this year compared with about 80 percent in 2016.
States have also significantly improved how often and how scrupulously they perform post-election audits.
The changes have been especially significant in some of the states ... contested by Trump.
Georgia and Pennsylvania have both shifted from having paper records for few or none of their voters in 2016 to having paper records for all votes cast in their states — a protection security experts say is a bare minimum to ensure votes weren’t altered by hackers or miscounted because of a technology failure.
The Cybersecurity 202: More states now have paper trails to verify votes were correctly counted
(Score: 2) by cmdrklarg on Thursday January 14 2021, @07:06PM
Unless you have some solid evidence of actual election fraud large enough to swing the election all you have is conjecture and feelings, neither of which will stand up in a court of law.
No, you're not supposed to trust the election machines. That's why we wanted paper ballots that can be counted. I notice that you don't question the results from any of the states that don't have a paper trail to follow. Why do you trust those?
I'm going to take a guess that it's because the "correct" candidate won those.