Hey Alex, there are two places voting happens. The real world on the traditional ballot, and through the liquid democracy app.
Voters only vote directly, or delegate their vote, within the liquid democracy app. Since it’s “just an app”, there are no changes needed to the law.
The interesting part is that if someone runs for real political office as a “liquid democracy candidate” (meaning they’ve pledged to simply follow whatever the voting results of the liquid app are 100%, like a “remote control politician”) then suddenly all the liquid app voters have a voice in government.