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This repo's use of Benford's Law is so misleading that it discredits other claims of fraud more generally.
- If you pull the data from Milwaukee city, the average ward has 755 votes. Biden wins an …
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The disappearance of Benford's law in Milwaukee is a function of voter preference alone. If one candidate has between 60% and 80% average chance of receiving a vote, then the sizes of the wards in Mil…
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https://github.com/bd271828/2020_election/tree/main/plot/tx
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- Covid caused the mail-in voting rate to rise.
- Counties counted votes at different rates due to the surplus of mail-in ballots vs the standard rate using an electronic system.
- Mail-in voting di…
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When introducing rbinom() and runif(), should I specify the arguments (i.e. x=, prob=, etc.)? In the code chunk or in the text after the code chunk?
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I combined the toolkit I've been building for the last few days with your data and some of the processing code. Not sure if this is something you'd be interested in, but I can put together a PR to add…
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Has there been any comparison of results for the race with data from different providers? E.g, compare NYT Edison vs Clarity Elections for Georgia or Fulton County
For what it's worth, I created a …
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Keep calm and learn math.
ps.: don't use lead digits in these situation. Misleading.
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@pkienzle :
For polarization correction in SANS, they need to be able to propagate errors through matrix multiply and inversion (looks like this is NotImplemented in dataflow.lib.uncertainty.Uncertai…
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Given that with Benford's law :
- Clarity should (?) improve as the spread of values increases
- The law still holds for any given base
Would be interesting to cross reference the same input …