India has invented the world's only lowest risk EVM which should not be questioned
This not true at all. In fact it's a strawman argument. Any demonstration of possible vulnerabilities will immediately be addressed.
Like the preloading of party symbol images. That's the latest. I'm sure there will be more in the future if a genuine case is raised. I wanted this thread to document all the instances where exactly this happened in the past. So I have linked to past judgements where this happened to no positive response here.
You also imply that questioning EVM erodes public trust so it should not be done, which is quite laughable from a technology security standpoint, even if you think for two minutes about it.
Raising concerns with no demonstrable claims does exactly that.
This discussion isn't about people or politics. Its core is about technology risks. It isn't about process risks as well although process related measures are well intentioned but not fool proof in the long run as there can be regimes in the future who may subvert the process.
Nobody denies this. As I said earlier..
Democracies aren't setup with the expectation that angels will enter office. They are setup so that if your PM turns out to be a crook you have adequate means of redressal.
And sorry, but "maintaining public trust in EVM" is frankly a shallow argument to put it kindly. The argument completely lacks merit, so I presume it is your sheer bias. Appeal to trust is not an argument for not asking tough questions and doing rigorous testing.
It's not an appeal to trust. The SC has to date disposed off nine petitions spanning a few years now seeking a return to the paper ballot. I don't know if that's your position but it clearly is with the people that filed those petitions and their driving agenda was a blind distrust that was not justified.
That argument is similar to saying that banking technology systems security should be repeatedly tested to keep trust in banking system to avoid bank runs. Thankfully, RBI does a great job organizing repeated security testing to ensure they are a step ahead of hackers most of the times. And hacks still happen.
A bank run as I'm sure you know stems from a lack of confidence in how the bank has been run. Rumours that it's over leveraged, over extended etc. Less for a fear it will be hacked or I'm not aware of such instances
Your statement is confusing to me otherwise.
Technology risks are mitigated only through regular well established security procedures. Public trust can not be blind trust of bureaucrats but should be based on transparency and frequenct testing by state of the art security researchers.
And those researchers want access to the source codes that the ECI considers a risk to be released. The best argument I've seen in this thread is the mantra 'security through obscurity is no security'.
So outright dismiss the concerns of the very people tasked with maintaining the system. Why is their objection not valid?
The ECI has supervised four successful general elections. Not to mention many more state elections. They are very confident they're on the right path