The Standard (St. Catharines)

Campaigns must be their own cyber-sheriffs

On digital patrol as misinforma­tion roils midterm elections

- STEVE PEOPLES AND CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY

NEW YORK — Kamala Harris has been the target of social media misinforma­tion campaigns since she became a U.S. senator.

Every month for the last 18 months, her office has discovered on average between three and five fake Facebook profiles pretending to be hers, according to a Harris aide. It’s unclear who creates the pages, which are often designed to mislead American voters about the ambitious Democratic senator’s policies and positions.

The aide spoke on the condition of anonymity, like more than a half dozen campaign officials contacted for this story, for fear of attracting unwanted attention from adversarie­s or scrutiny on the Senate office’s evolving cybersecur­ity protocols.

Such internet mischief has become commonplac­e in U.S. politics. Facebook announced earlier this week that it uncovered “sophistica­ted” efforts, possibly linked to Russia, to influence U.S. politics on its platforms. Senior intelligen­ce officials declared Thursday that foreign adversarie­s continue waging a quiet war against U.S. campaigns and election systems.

Still, one thing has become clear: With the midterm elections just three months away, campaigns are largely on their own in the increasing­ly challengin­g task of protecting sensitive informatio­n and countering false or misleading content on social media.

The Democratic National Committee has worked to strengthen its own internal security protocols and encouraged state parties to do the same, according to Raffi Krikorian, who previously worked for Uber and Twitter and now serves as the DNC’s chief technology officer.

But in an interview, he acknowledg­ed there are limits to how much the national party can protect the thousands of Democratic campaigns across the country.

“We’re providing as much assistance to campaigns as we can, but there’s only so much we can do,” Krikorian said.

“For all the high-level campaigns I’m worried, but at least there are people to talk to,” he continued. “The mid-sized campaigns are at least getting technical volunteers, but the truly down-ballot campaigns, that’s where the state parties and coordinate­d campaigns can help, but there’s no doubt that this is an uphill battle when we’re dealing with a foreign adversary.”

Officials in both political parties have intensifie­d cybersecur­ity efforts, although the known cases of interferen­ce have so far overwhelmi­ngly focused on Democrats.

The DNC now has a staff of 40 on its technical team, led by Krikorian and other Silicon Valley veterans hired in the months after Russians hacked the party’s email system and released a trove of damaging messages in the months before President Donald Trump’s 2016 victory.

Top U.S. intelligen­ce and homeland security officials raised new alarms Thursday about outside efforts to influence the 2018 and 2020 elections during a White House press briefing.

Homeland Security chief Kirstjen Nielsen said: “Our democracy is in the crosshairs,” while Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats added: “We continue to see a pervasive messaging campaign by Russia to try to weaken and divide the United States.”

Facebook said it removed 32 accounts from its site and Instagram because they were involved in “co-ordinated” political behaviour and appeared to be fake.

Nearly 300,000 people followed at least one of the accounts, which featured names such as “Black Elevation” and “Resisters” and were designed to manipulate Americans with particular ethnic, cultural or political identities.

In many cases, House and Senate political campaigns said they’re just beginning to adopt basic internal security protocols, such as two-step verificati­on for all email, storage and social media accounts and encrypted messaging services such as Wickr.

There is no protocol in place for campaigns or national parties to monitor broader social media misinforma­tion campaigns, however. Nor is there any sign that law enforcemen­t is playing a proactive role to protect campaigns from meddling on a dayto-day basis.

The FBI has set up a Foreign Influence Task Force and intelligen­ce agencies are collecting informatio­n on Russian aggression, but campaigns report no regular contact with law enforcemen­t officials.

“At the end of the day, the U.S. government is not putting any type of a bubble around any (campaign). They do not have the authority, capacity or capability to do it,” said Shawn Henry, a former senior FBI official who now leads the cybersecur­ity firm CrowdStrik­e, which works with political campaigns. “NSA is not sitting in the ISPs filtering out malicious traffic.”

Henry added: “They’ve got to take proactive actions themselves.”

Earlier this month, Microsoft said it discovered a fake domain had been set up as the landing page for phishing attacks by a hacking group believed to have links to Russian intelligen­ce. A Microsoft spokespers­on said this week that additional analysis confirmed the attempted attacks occurred in late 2017 and targeted multiple accounts associated with the offices of two legislator­s running for re-election. Microsoft did not name the lawmakers.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said Russian hackers tried unsuccessf­ully to infiltrate her Senate computer network in

2017. Former Democratic U.S. Rep. Brad Ashford of Nebraska also recently confirmed that his 2016 campaign emails had been hacked by Russian agents.

Ashford, who narrowly lost his seat to Republican Don Bacon that year, said hackers obtained all of his campaign email correspond­ence with the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee.

He said he was notified of the breach in late July or early August 2016 by House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi’s office.

Ashford has said he doesn’t believe any of the stolen informatio­n ever went to Bacon or the Republican Party, and he doesn’t know whether it made a difference in his race. He did face a series of anonymous political attacks on social media.

By their very nature, U.S. political campaigns can be a challenge to defend from a cybersecur­ity standpoint. They are essentiall­y pop-up organizati­ons that rely heavily on volunteers and are focused on a singular task — winning.

In addition, high-level IT expertise costs money and campaigns typically run on tight budgets.

Some 2018 House campaigns have yet to hire basic communicat­ions staffers.

In the case of California Sen. Harris, who is considered a 2020 presidenti­al prospect, her office plans to continue rooting out fake social media profiles on its own. They have had no contact with the FBI. They have reported the issue to Facebook in every case — not the other way around.

“It’s on the forefront of everybody’s mind,” said Patrick McHugh, a former Senate campaign official who now leads the Democratic-aligned super PAC Priorities USA.

“All it takes is one person on a campaign to make a mistake,” McHugh said. “You’re up against a foreign country. That’s a pretty big adversary that can and will go to all ends to get in.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Kamala Harris, a Democrat, has been the target of fake Facebook profiles pretending to be her own.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Kamala Harris, a Democrat, has been the target of fake Facebook profiles pretending to be her own.
 ?? ATLANTIC COUNCIL/DIGITAL FORENSI
NYT ?? Facebook says this Facebook political page called Resisters was a tool in a co-ordinated political influence operation ahead of the midterms.
ATLANTIC COUNCIL/DIGITAL FORENSI NYT Facebook says this Facebook political page called Resisters was a tool in a co-ordinated political influence operation ahead of the midterms.

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