Voters in a Wisconsin town will be the first to use Microsoft's new ElectionGuard open-source technology in a pilot election tomorrow. The system generates a ballot-tracking code that voters can use to verify that their ballot is included in the results. https://t.co/OWgw4YbfZg
— Kim Zetter (@KimZetter) February 18, 2020
A step forward for election verification with a pilot of the Microsoft Election Guard cryptography in a small election in Wisconsin today. https://t.co/xGpLfjeIr5
— Center for Civic Design (@civicdesign) February 18, 2020
We are excited that #ElectionGuard is being used in a pilot primary election in Fulton, WI. Great job @Microsoft and @voting_works! https://t.co/SFmprzRbUH
— Free & Fair (@free_and_fair) February 17, 2020
This could be Microsoft's most important product in 2020. If it works https://t.co/4VvH7Ud7wf By @alfredwkng @CNET
— Jessica Dolcourt (@jdolcourt) February 18, 2020
New: Microsoft is testing its end-to-end verification voter system for the first time today in a local Wisconsin election with about 500 registered voters.
— alfred ? (@alfredwkng) February 18, 2020
ElectionGuard has potential, but there are many ways it could go wrong. Our dive: https://t.co/dIT4si9d5u
Voters in a Wisconsin town will be the first to use Microsoft's new ElectionGuard open-source technology in a pilot election tomorrow. The system generates a ballot-tracking code that voters can use to verify that their ballot is included in the results. https://t.co/OWgw4YbfZg
— Kim Zetter (@KimZetter) February 18, 2020
Microsoft to deploy ElectionGuard voting software for the first time https://t.co/CV19QBqPfP via @ZDNet & @campuscodi
— Stephen L Rose (@stephenlrose) February 18, 2020