San Francisco Chronicle

FBI will tell states of vote breaches

- By Eric Tucker Eric Tucker is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The FBI, in a change of policy, is committing to inform state officials if local election systems have been breached, federal officials told the Associated Press.

In the past, the FBI would alert local government­s about attacks on their electoral systems without automatica­lly sharing that informatio­n with the state. That meant state officials, left in the dark, might be in a position of certifying the accuracy of election results without realizing there had been problems in individual counties. Alerting local government­s about breaches, but not the states, was in keeping with FBI policy of protecting the privacy and identities of the actual hacking victim.

The change is intended to bolster federalsta­te cooperatio­n, which has often been difficult on electoral issues, and is one of several government efforts to rethink how informatio­n about cyber threats is shared and with whom. Some local officials in the past have complained about the lack of informatio­n from the federal government, though cooperatio­n has improved ahead of the 2020 election with concerns that Russia or another nation could try to tamper with the vote.

Under the new protocol, the FBI will continue to alert counties victimized by breaches first. A state’s chief election official, in most cases the secretary of state, will be notified either at the same time or soon after.

Officials say their goal is to sound the alarm louder and at higher levels of government than in past years, ensuring that informatio­n about efforts to interfere in the election reaches the state officials who need it the most and who have the best resources to deal with it.

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