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Many state and local governments still operate official websites with .us, .com or .org domains, but that may soon start to shift as they move to more secure and trusted .gov domains.
That’s thanks to the DOTGOV Online Trust in Government Act, a piece of legislation tucked into an omnibus spending and coronavirus pandemic relief bill Congress passed in December.
The law provides support services, security enhancements and outreach from the federal government to state and local agencies to get them to shift their domains to .gov. The law would reduce or wipe away the costs of making the shift, which security experts agree is an essential element of improving internet security for government agencies.
EU Reporter
Published 2 months ago
Vidya S Sharma , M.B.A., Ph.D. writes:
After the 6 January 2021 riots/insurrection/failed coup attempt that led to the storming of the Capitol in Washington, this is what I wrote to some of my friends and clients:
“What happened on January 6, 2021, on the Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, was only 4 years too late. The groundwork for this event was laid by Trump in 2016 when he continued to tell his supporters the system was rigged, millions of dead people were voting for Democrats (surprisingly NOT even one for the Republican candidates), there was voter fraud on a massive scale, etc. These riots did not take place in 2016 because Trump won and Hillary Clinton conceded even before the counting was finished.
The Trump campaign has not withdrawn its suit challenging the Wisconsin election, and it is hoping the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the case under a doctrine sometimes used in similar cases to prevent a case from being declared âmootâ because an event has passed.
William Bock III, the Indianapolis attorney representing Donald Trump in the case against the Wisconsin Elections Commission and other defendants, says he is expecting the court will consider whether to take the case under the doctrine of âcapable of repetition but evading review.â
The purpose of applying the doctrine in this case, Bock said, would be âso that the courts can take a look at issues that might come up in future elections.â He says he is not expecting that the Wisconsin election result, which showed Biden winning by a margin of 20,682 votes, to be thrown out.