| 
		Exclusive: Fearful of fake news blitz, 
		U.S. Census enlists help of tech giants 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [March 27, 2019] 
		By Nick Brown 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Census Bureau 
		has asked tech giants Google, Facebook and Twitter to help it fend off 
		“fake news" campaigns it fears could disrupt the upcoming 2020 count, 
		according to Census officials and multiple sources briefed on the 
		matter.
 
 The push, the details of which have not been previously reported, 
		follows warnings from data and cybersecurity experts dating back to 2016 
		that right-wing groups and foreign actors may borrow the “fake news” 
		playbook from the last presidential election to dissuade immigrants from 
		participating in the decennial count, the officials and sources told 
		Reuters.
 
 The sources, who asked not to be named, said evidence included 
		increasing chatter on platforms like "4chan" by domestic and foreign 
		networks keen to undermine the survey. The census, they said, is a 
		powerful target because it shapes U.S. election districts and the 
		allocation of more than $800 billion a year in federal spending.
 
		
		 
		
 Ron Jarmin, the Deputy Director of the Census Bureau, confirmed the 
		bureau was anticipating disinformation campaigns, and was enlisting the 
		help of big tech companies to fend off the threat.
 
 "We expect that (the census) will be a target for those sorts of efforts 
		in 2020," he said.
 
 Census Bureau officials have held multiple meetings with tech companies 
		since 2017 to discuss ways they could help, including as recently as 
		last week, Jarmin said.
 
 So far, the bureau has gotten initial commitments from Alphabet Inc's 
		Google, Twitter Inc and Facebook Inc to help quash disinformation 
		campaigns online, according to documents summarizing some of those 
		meetings reviewed by Reuters.
 
 But neither Census nor the companies have said how advanced any of the 
		efforts are.
 
 Facebook spokesman Adam Stone confirmed the meetings with Census, but 
		did not provide details of any agreed action. Twitter and Google 
		declined to comment.
 
 The bureau has also embarked on an online landgrab to control census 
		look-alike websites, according to Census officials. These sites could 
		end up in the hands of people who want to dissuade some portions of the 
		population from responding to the survey.
 
 "We came up with a list of 20 to 30 URLs that we wanted to make sure we 
		owned," said Census spokesman Stephen Buckner, adding the bureau had 
		done the same before the 2010 count "to mitigate confusion about where 
		to go."
 
 Census controls at least two non-government websites with “census” in 
		the name - 2020census.com and 2020census.org - through marketing firm 
		Reingold, Buckner said.
 
 The Census Bureau, until now, has kept mostly mum about how it plans to 
		counter disinformation. The efforts highlight the challenges posed by 
		the internet age to the decennial gathering of data on America’s 
		population.
 
 So-called "fake news" strategies can take myriad forms, according to 
		cyber experts: posing as a demographic group to convey false information 
		under the guise of advocacy; spreading false data by doctoring ads and 
		news stories; or circulating bogus information to drum up fear and 
		opposition.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			Facebook, Google and Twitter logos are seen in this combination 
			photo from Reuters files. REUTERS/File Photos 
            
 
            Jarmin said activists could target the census "mostly through 
			attempts to get them to not participate, either by scaring them or 
			telling them it’s not important, or that something they had already 
			done - like paying their taxes - had completed the census."
 HELP FROM SILICON VALLEY
 
 Former Census Director John Thompson, who left the bureau in 2017, 
			remembers his first briefing about the disinformation threat - 
			shortly after the 2016 presidential election - and said it was the 
			bureau’s catalyst to act.
 
 Thompson said he had invited data expert danah boyd to speak to top 
			officials in 2016. boyd, who stylizes her name lowercase, said she 
			was seeing chatter on the dark web in white supremacist and other 
			communities about wanting to disrupt the count, according to 
			Thompson and two other people in the room, who declined to be named. 
			boyd declined to be interviewed about her presentation.
 
 Thompson declined to provide details of threats outlined at the 
			meeting, but called them "chilling."
 
 One of the sources present said boyd discussed efforts by "far-right 
			actors and foreign governments" to use disinformation campaigns to 
			discourage minorities from participating.
 
 A year later, the Census Bureau organized a forum in Silicon Valley, 
			partly about the 2020 disinformation threat, which was attended by 
			boyd, locally elected officials and representatives from tech 
			companies including Twitter, Uber Technologies and Microsoft Corp.
 
 During that gathering, Census officials also visited Facebook and 
			Google campuses to meet with executives.
 
 According to notes from the 2017 meetings reviewed by Reuters, 
			Google told Census it would consider creating a bespoke 
			census-related search project. Twitter also agreed to help mitigate 
			misinformation, according to the notes.
 
 At a meeting with Facebook, Census officials discussed allowing the 
			company to join conversations between Census and the U.S. Department 
			of Defense about security; creating Facebook groups on census 
			topics; and training Census workers through Facebook technology, 
			according to the notes.
 
            
			 
			Census has held subsequent meetings with these companies, including 
			as recently as this month, according to Census officials.
 It remains unclear how many of these ideas Census and tech companies 
			have put into action.
 
 Census' Jarmin said: "There were some hits from those meetings, and 
			some things that didn’t pan out."
 
 (Additional reporting by Katie Paul in San Francisco; Editing by 
			Richard Valdmanis and Paul Thomasch)
 
		[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |