The US election system is secure. But human nature is a vulnerability
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[October 31, 2024]
By DAVID KLEPPER and CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Hacking a local election system in the United States
wouldn't be easy, and secretly altering votes on a scale massive enough
to change the outcome of the presidential race would be impossible,
election officials have said, thanks to decentralized systems, paper
records for nearly all ballots, exhaustive reviews, legal due process
and decades of work by American election officials, volunteers and
citizens.
But foreign actors and domestic extremist groups looking to meddle in
next week's election can target a much weaker link: voters' perceptions
and emotions. Those intent on undermining confidence in U.S. democracy
don't have to change any votes if they can convince enough Americans not
to trust the outcome.
It's a possible scenario particularly concerning to intelligence
analysts and officials tasked with protecting America's election: An
adversary tries to hack a state or local election system and then
releases a document — perhaps a fake one or even material that is
publicly available — and suggests it's evidence of vote rigging.
Or, a video is crafted showing someone supposedly hacking into a ballot
scanner, voting machine or a state voter registration system. But it
hasn't happened, and it would not be true.
It's called a perception hack, which may or may not include an actual
breach of voting systems but is made to appear that has happened. In
some cases, minor information might be stolen — enough for a video to
appear legitimate — but it does not change votes. A related threat
involves fake footage supposedly depicting election workers destroying
ballots.
In either case, the goal is the same: to generate confusion, distrust
and fear.
Governments at all levels have worked to strengthen election
infrastructure in recent years. The human brain, however, remains hard
to defend.
“I think that’s almost certain to happen,” former CIA political analyst
Adam Darrah said when discussing the risk of perception hacks.
Darrah, now vice president of intelligence at the cybersecurity company
ZeroFox, said misleading people into thinking election systems are
vulnerable is a lot easier than actually hacking into them. ”It’s a way
to induce panic. We are very technically resilient. Our emotional
resilience, our hypersensitivity, that’s still a challenge.”
Narrow margins of victory or delays in vote counting could heighten the
risk that a perception hack could fool a large number of voters, further
polarizing the electorate, raising the risk of political violence and
potentially complicating the transfer of power in January.
Intelligence officials warned last week that Russia and Iran may
consider encouraging violent protests in the U.S. following the
election. The nation’s intelligence community and private analysts agree
that while the Kremlin is backing former President Donald Trump,
Moscow’s ultimate goal is to divide Americans and undermine U.S. support
for Ukraine and the NATO alliance.
America’s adversaries focus on disinformation in part, officials say,
because they understand the country’s election infrastructure is too
secure to hack successfully.
Despite the findings of intelligence officials, both Russia and Iran
have rejected claims that they are seeking to influence the U.S.
election.
“We have never interfered, we are not interfering, and we do not intend
to interfere," a spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Washington wrote
in an email to The Associated Press.
Even without a foreign power's involvement, isolated stories of long
lines at the polls, ballot mix-ups or other irregularities could be held
up as proof that elections can’t be trusted.
It happened in 2020, when Trump amplified claims about election
problems, helping lead to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol
by his supporters trying to disrupt certification of the election.
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Voting machines are prepared for use on Election Day at the
Allegheny County Elections Division warehouse, Wednesday, Oct. 30,
2024, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Matt Freed)
The former Republican president has spent months laying the
groundwork to challenge the results of this year's election if he
loses. And he has worked to convince his supporters that the only
way he can lose is if Democrats cheat, urging them to deliver a
victory “too big to rig.”
“They cheat,” Trump said at a Michigan rally last month. “That’s the
only way we’re going to lose, because they cheat. They cheat like
hell.”
Just as in 2020, the days immediately after the election are likely
to be the most critical, as results are announced and Americans come
to the end of a contentious race.
It's then that authoritarian nations or domestic anti-democratic
groups will look to whip up distrust in an effort to spur people
into action, said Paul Barrett, a New York University law professor
who studies online discourse and polarization.
“They're happy to see Americans at the throats of other Americans,”
Barrett said. “We saw that in 2021, and I have tremendous anxiety
that we will see a repeat.”
In response, national security and election officials across the
country have moved to expose disinformation and quickly knock down
rumors. Top intelligence officials have held multiple briefings
outlining foreign threats, while cybersecurity and election
officials have explained why election systems are secure.
Last week, a video purporting to show someone destroying mail
ballots in Pennsylvania began spreading on social media. Bipartisan
election officials in Bucks County quickly debunked the video, and
intelligence officials linked it to a Russian campaign behind other
videos seeking to smear Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic
nominee, and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
“That video was debunked pretty quickly on multiple news sites, and
I know that Bucks County immediately got out in front of it and
basically explained why it was a fake and why voters should have
confidence,” said Kim Wyman, former secretary of state in Washington
state who also has worked at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency.
“But the problem is — now it exists out there,” she said. "And we
know that it will continue to be circulated between now and probably
Inauguration Day.”
Americans can help prevent a successful perception hack by not
spreading election hoaxes any further. Disinformation experts urge
voters to consult a variety of sources of information, be skeptical
of anonymous social media claims and turn to their own state and
local officials for the facts.
Uncertainty and emotions will be running high in the days after
voting ends — exactly the conditions foreign adversaries and
domestic extremists need to undermine trust.
“Our foreign adversaries are looking to attack our democratic
process to further their own objectives, and we need the help of all
Americans in ensuring they are not successful,” said CISA senior
adviser Cait Conley. ”Americans should be confident that their votes
will be counted as cast. They should also know that our foreign
adversaries will try to make them believe otherwise."
"We encourage everyone to remain vigilant, verify the information
they consume, and rely on trusted sources like their state and local
election officials,” she added.
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Cassidy reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writer Jill Colvin
in New York contributed to this report.
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