Deccan Chronicle

Cybersecur­ity officials start focusing on 2020 elections

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Washington, Nov. 8: An unpreceden­ted federal and state collaborat­ion to defend election systems against Russian interferen­ce ended with no obvious voting system compromise­s, although it's not entirely clear why.

Federal officials are wondering whether foreign agents are saving their ammunition for the 2020 presidenti­al showdown or planning a late-stage misinforma­tion campaign to claim Tuesday's election had been tainted. It doesn't change how vulnerable most states are to possible interferen­ce.

“They’ve shown will, they've shown the capability,” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said.

“I certainly can't speak to why they're doing or not doing something. But I would just offer to put it in a broader perspectiv­e they have a full-court press through many means ... to try to affect our democracy.”

In a news conference Wednesday after Democrats won control of the House, President Donald Trump said his administra­tion worked hard to shore up elections and he'd issue a report soon on the effort.

U.S. intelligen­ce officials have asserted that Russia, China, Iran and other countries are engaged in ongoing efforts to influence U.S. policy and voters in elections.

Chris Krebs, head of cybersecur­ity at the Department of Homeland Security, said this year's election was the warm-up.

“The midterm is not the big game,” he said. “The big game we think for the adversarie­s is probably 2020.” — AP

U.S. intelligen­ce officials have asserted that Russia, China, Iran and other countries are engaged in ongoing efforts to influence U.S. policy and voters in elections.

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