@thedesertlynx Ordinary person can't read the code, and when blockchain and zero-knowledge proofs are involved the number of people who can audit the code becomes so small that they can be conveniently ignored.
Also, if blockchain is permissioned, you have to trust node operators. I doubt any government would run elections on a public permissionless blockchain, but even in that case, with open-source contracts and open-source app built deterministically and distributed through open-source app stores, that app still needs to connect to an identity server that contains centrally issued government IDs. And if the government doesn't have the monopoly over IDs, then it's not the government.
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silverpill (silverpill@mitra.social)'s status on Monday, 06-Feb-2023 05:15:01 JSTsilverpill