Amid US Postal Service ‘Crisis’ USPS Files Patent for Blockchain Mail-in Voting Scheme

The United States Postal Service (USPS) is falling apart at the seams and many Americans are blaming the Trump administration. The USPS may have to deal with the U.S. election ballot process, as mail-in votes may be the dominant practice thanks to the coronavirus. Amid the American public’s concerned reaction about the internal problems at the USPS, on August 13, the postal entity published a patent for a blockchain-based mail-in voting system.

Every single day on social media and Reddit forums, users in the United States are discussing the United States Postal Service (USPS) and how the operation might be in ruins. Americans are beginning to realize on a nationwide scale that the USPS is financially broke and not sustainable.

On social media, U.S. citizens are sharing images of locked letter stations and mailboxes being carted away on flatbeds. The Trump administration’s Postmaster General Louis DeJoy also made a decision to remove hundreds of high-volume mail-processing machines nationwide outraging Democrats.

Democrats have accused President Donald Trump of “dismantling” the United States Postal Service (USPS) prior to the election as many understand that a mail-in voting scheme will be adopted.

Many Americans are aware that mail-in voting most likely will be the most dominant method used this November during the U.S. 2020 Presidential Election. Trump has explained to the media on a number of occasions that it’s likely the voting process will go down in this manner.

DeJoy’s recent moves make some people believe that voter suppression is happening and a left-leaning direct action organization called “Shut Down D.C.” has organized a protest outside the Postmaster’s home.

However, President Trump commended the Postmaster’s recent moves and said DeJoy “wants to make the post office great again.”

Amid all the indignant complaints from Democrats, the USPS seems to be moving toward leveraging blockchain technology in a new mail-in voting patent published last Thursday. Even when the USPS was in better standards than it is today, voters complained that the mail-in voting system was riddled with manipulation.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is not liked by members of the political left and he is also accused of owning $30M in equity in a USPS contractor and owns stock options in a USPS competitor business. DeJoy and the USPS Washington headquarters’ office published a patent for a blockchain mail-in voting scheme on August 13, 2020.

This is due to the fact that investigations have found dogs and even dead people allegedly ‘voted’ in prior U.S. presidential elections. The patent published on the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is called “The Secure Voting System.”

“Often a voter is not able to or does not desire to go to a polling place to cast a vote,” the USPS patent description notes. “An election official in a jurisdiction may wish to send secure ballots via mail. Or, a jurisdiction may opt to utilize electronic resources for voting. In such cases, a secure voting system is desired.” The patent description also adds:

A voting system can use the security of blockchain and the mail to provide a reliable voting system. A registered voter receives a computer-readable code in the mail and confirms identity and confirms correct ballot information in an election. The system separates voter identification and votes to ensure vote anonymity, and stores votes on a distributed ledger in a blockchain.

The patent is 47 pages long and contains a myriad of diagrams detailing how the blockchain-based mail-in voting system would work theoretically.

The USPS “Secure Voting System” patent that leverages blockchain technology.

“The security of a voting system can be increased by using the dependability and security of the United States Postal Service or similar entity,” the USPS patent details. “And this can be incorporated with a secure computer system using a blockchain or distributed ledger to ensure vote security and to prevent tampering or modification of electronic voting results.”

No one truly knows if the blockchain system can be implemented in time by the November election, but people do think that it is highly coincidental the USPS would publish this patent just a few months prior.

The USPS “Secure Voting System” patent that leverages blockchain technology.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and the USPS could deploy a blockchain system if there is enough demand for it, but many believe it may be too late to deploy such a system.

DeJoy must appear before a hearing by the House Oversight Committee with the U.S. Postal Service Inspector General Tammy Whitcomb on September 17. The U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and other Democrats created this hearing in order to address the USPS leader’s alleged internal problems.

Even the House Oversight Committee may not be enough, as it will happen only a few weeks before the U.S. election. This has invoked the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, and other House Democratic leaders, to call for an earlier meeting before September 17. Pelosi and other bureaucrats may attempt to meet this week in order to address the USPS issues.

A House Democratic aide told the newsdesk Axios that the Democrats perceive the current issues with the USPS a “crisis,” and the complaints mostly revolve around the handling of the mail-in vote scheme.

It’s fairly understood that a mail-in voting method for the 2020 U.S. election will happen, but whether or not the USPS and other entities leverage blockchain seems to be being discussed by central planners. Meanwhile, the 2020 U.S. election is only 77 days away and time is running out.

What do you think about the U.S. possibly leveraging blockchain technology for the 2020 U.S. Election? Let us know what you think about this subject in the comments section below.

Tags in this story
2020 Presidential Election, Blockchain, blockchain system, Democrats, DIstributed Ledger, Donald Trump, Election Blockchain, electronic voting results, Elizabeth Warren, Mail-in voting, Nancy Pelosi, Post Office, Postal Service, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, Republicans, Tammy Whitcomb, USPS

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