This is the same state that spend $60M-ish to revamp their entire unemployment system 6 years ago, only to have it completely collapse this year when 'rona landed. 

On Tue, Oct 6, 2020 at 4:19 PM Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
I understand that there is underlying work that can't be sourced somewhere else, at least not trivially.

How many of these overloaded web sites that we hear about (voter registration, unemployment registration, web sites announced in a big way, causing surges in traffic, etc.) have a CDN offloading the low-hanging fruit?

I know that processing a voter registration is far more intensive than serving up static images, but surely a CDN taking the low hanging fruit would help to some degree. I'm assuming most of the people running these sites are clueless and haven't looked at this, but maybe they have.


From: "Sean Donelan" <sean@donelan.com>
To: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Tuesday, October 6, 2020 11:51:39 AM
Subject: Florida: Voter registration website overwhelmed at deadline


Every election has problems. Most of the time, those problems aren't
noticed. Elections rely on a lot of back-end infrastructure, besides the
actual voting itself.

It could be a DDOS attack, or simply duct-taped systems having trouble
with the load.

Voting early (mail, drop-off, in-person) means more time to fix glitches.



https://apnews.com/article/virus-outbreak-election-2020-florida-elections-ron-desantis-dc8aaf2213b6c50451019a7c0c07c3f7

The FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency warned
elections officials nationwide last week that cyberattacks could disrupt
their systems during the run-up to the election. They particularly noted
“distributed denial-of-service” attacks, which inundate a computer system
with requests, potentially clogging up servers until the system becomes
inaccessible to legitimate users.