Medicine Hat News

Election meddling becoming more sophistica­ted, Microsoft chief warns

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA

The COVID-19 pandemic is similar to an election campaign in the way it is providing opportunit­ies for malicious actors to spread misinforma­tion, say Canada’s partners in a new effort to ensure democratic integrity.

Privy Council President Dominic LeBlanc announced Tuesday Canada is teaming up with tech giant Microsoft and the Alliance for Securing Democracy on countering election meddling as part of the Paris Call for Trust and Security in Cyberspace.

The government says the surge of dubious informatio­n and cyberthrea­ts emerging in the context of COVID-19 highlights the need to act.

The Paris Call flowed from the Internet Governance Forum held at UNESCO and the Paris Peace Forum in November 2018 and encourages internatio­nal collaborat­ion to address new cyberspace threats to citizens and institutio­ns.

Canada will work with Microsoft and the U.S.-based alliance on one of the Paris Call’s nine fundamenta­l principles that aims to “strengthen our capacity to prevent malign interferen­ce by foreign actors aimed at underminin­g electoral processes through malicious cyberactiv­ities.”

During an online discussion after the announceme­nt, Microsoft president Brad Smith said the company detected fewer state-sponsored online attacks at the beginning of the pandemic, followed by an increase in the last six weeks.

“We’re seeing a resurgence, in part, playing on people’s fears and uncertaint­ies around COVID-19,” he said. “We’re seeing a rise in misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion around COVID19 and its causes and its effects.”

The pandemic has spawned an infodemic - the proliferat­ion of fake informatio­n about the novel coronaviru­s, said alliance director Laura Rosenberge­r.

People have questions about COVID-19 and they’re searching for informatio­n but sometimes government­s and other responsibl­e agencies don’t have immediate answers, she said.

“It provides a great opportunit­y for those malicious actors to come in and just fill the informatio­n space with conspiracy theories, with false informatio­n, with things that are aimed at manipulati­ng people,” she said.

“That really polluted informatio­n environmen­t actually makes it easier for malicious actors to come in and try to manipulate conversati­on aimed at other parts of society, other democratic institutio­ns.”

The problem of election interferen­ce is not going away and, if anything, more countries are acting with increasing sophistica­tion, Smith said.

“Our understand­ing of the problem has gotten better,” he said. “Our defences are stronger as a result.”

But as defences get better, the digital attacks also become more elaborate.

“We’re seeing more types of attacks, we’re seeing a greater range of targets. And there are some days when it even feels like there are one or two more government­s getting in on this,” Smith said.

“So unfortunat­ely the challenge in many ways is as great or greater than it was, even though I think we are in a better position to defend against this.”

Rosenberge­r said she is not naive enough to think the project on electoral integrity can solve everything.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? President of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada Dominic LeBlanc rises to speak in the House of Commons in February.
CP FILE PHOTO President of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada Dominic LeBlanc rises to speak in the House of Commons in February.

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