I worked for a while as a coder myself, and I have to agree they did a poor job coming up with a credible IT explanation for the "glitch".
However, I live in a country that has been using electronic voting for the past 20 years, and although there's always some complaining or vague accusations of rigging from the loser side, most of the electorate seems to have a lot of confidence on the voting machines.
Because of this, the movie's depiction of many people's quickness to dismiss any problems seemed accurate to me, at least if the movie was about an election in my country, not in the US. If and when the US switches to electronic voting, you guys would be so paranoid about it that I believe no official vote would ever be cast until you're 100% sure that the code, the machines and everything else is thoroughly reviewed.
It's kind of ironic that a country with a people which is so skeptical about electronic voting ended up having a presidential election decided by a court in Florida, isn't it? And if I remember correctly, most of the problems in the 2000 presidential election arose from "glitches" in paper-ballots.
In the end, I guess we all have to assume the electoral process isn't perfect - electronic or not. But Hollywood should definitely hire IT consultants more often.
The Death Star on Star Wars was destroyed because of a small design error, and this "happened" on a time when interstellar travel is as easy as going to the market. But hey, I'm talking about one of the most successful movie franchises ever, so I guess they're right and we're wrong.
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Let's all agree to keep signatures apart from text body?
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