when presenting the first report at the National Museum of Architecture in Caracas, Robinson Rivas, who is an expert from the Simon Bolivar University, pointed out that the SAV has a technical complexity whose three parts are linked: the voting machine itself, the data transmission system and the totalization system.
‘Up to now, we have been able to explain the software corresponding to the voting machine in depth, in other words, there are still two stages missing, which would be the transmission and the totalization, which is the software that is executed in the CNE once the data coming from the voting machine arrives,’ he specified.
Rivas pointed out that so far all 10 auditors have certified the verified system and stressed that they are satisfied with the work of the technical staff, who patiently answered all the questions and even gave them freedom to organize the schedule.
The expert said that, in general, the requirements expected for this type of voting machine are met.
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