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swag

(26,487 posts)
Sun Jan 12, 2020, 10:29 AM Jan 2020

The 2020 election: 4 threats to anticipate

http://www.abajournal.com/web/article/four-threats-to-anticipate-ahead-of-the-2020-election

BY AMANDA ROBERT

JANUARY 2, 2020, 10:05 AM CST

Excerpt:

1. Entire election process could be targeted. Since it’s possible that someone could hack into the election system to change votes that then change the election outcome, Spaulding says federal authorities and local and state officials should work to secure each step of the process, including voter registration, ballot counting and election results reporting. As a board member of Defending Digital Campaigns, she is also helping to identify cybersecurity providers who can provide services to political parties and campaigns for free or at a discount. “We recognize that campaigns, particularly congressional campaigns, are usually shoestring operations,” she says. “They are often run out of someone’s kitchen or living room, and we know they can be targets.”

2. Disinformation about candidates or election will be circulated. Adav Noti, senior director, trial litigation and chief of staff at the Campaign Legal Center in Washington, D.C., and Spaulding agree that a more significant threat is disinformation spread by malicious actors to manipulate the public’s confidence in the election system. This could include false information about polling places changing to different locations to suppress turnout or false claims that results were altered to cause disruption after the election. “One of the big lessons of 2016 is that there are very sophisticated actors, both within the United States and abroad, who are willing and able to exploit the wild west atmosphere online to advance their agenda,” says Noti, formerly with the Federal Election Commission. He encourages voters to remain skeptical of information they find online, while Spaulding contends that consistent use of paper ballots and post-election audits could help legitimize outcomes.

3. Social media could amplify false messaging. Disinformation isn’t new, but the use of social media to quickly and widely spread it is unprecedented, says Jennifer Daskal, a professor and faculty director of the Tech, Law & Security Program at American University Washington College of Law in Washington, D.C. She contends that other features of social media, including the “possibility of ad micro targeting, the extreme popularity of and easy ability to spread outrageous messages that increase views and closed circles of people who communicate in self-referential ways,” facilitate the spread of disinformation. To prevent malicious foreign actors and others from exploiting these vulnerabilities, Daskal suggests companies and governments identify and take down inauthentic and fraudulent accounts, mandate transparency as to the source and targeting practices associated with ads and share threat information, including election interference efforts. “Members of the public also have a role to play—taking steps to evaluate information critically and educate themselves about their information sources,” she adds.

4. The effects of disinformation could be felt long after the election. The “liar’s dividend”—the theory that constantly filtering through false messages and manipulated media results in the public not trusting any information—may be a long-term consequence of election interference, says Matthew F. Ferraro, a former intelligence officer and now senior associate in WilmerHale’s Washington, D.C., office. “Disinformation and deep fakes—and even the discussion of these things—give people permission to disbelieve real things to the benefit of the liar,” he says. “That has a way of exacerbating previously held beliefs and chipping away at fundamental shared values of truth and objectivity.” Spaulding adds that it causes the public to tune out and not participate in voting or holding institutions accountable. For that, she says, the remedy is civic education. “It focuses on reminding Americans about how important democracy is and why it’s worth fighting for,” Spaulding says.
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The 2020 election: 4 threats to anticipate (Original Post) swag Jan 2020 OP
Someone with very deep pockets should do a media blitz defacto7 Jan 2020 #1
And number 5, the longstanding, ongoing threat due to the existence of the Electoral College DavidDvorkin Jan 2020 #2

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
1. Someone with very deep pockets should do a media blitz
Sun Jan 12, 2020, 10:39 AM
Jan 2020

warning the public of the coming disinformation that will permeate the election period and make it nonpartisan to dispel any partisan motives. They should publish regular steady warnings to be wary of negative messaging from all sources.

DavidDvorkin

(19,483 posts)
2. And number 5, the longstanding, ongoing threat due to the existence of the Electoral College
Sun Jan 12, 2020, 03:54 PM
Jan 2020

A monstrosity that should have been amended away long ago.

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