Santa Cruz Sentinel

Scammers seize on election but not for votes

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The email from a political action committee seemed harmless: if you support Joe Biden, it urged, click here to make sure you’re registered to vote.

But Harvard University graduate student Maya James did not click. Instead, she Googled the name of the soliciting PAC. It didn’t exist — a clue the email was a phishing scam from swindlers trying to exploit the U.S. presidenti­al election as a way to steal peoples’ personal informatio­n.

“There was not a trace of them,” James, 22, said. “It was a very inconspicu­ous email, but I noticed it used very emotional language, and that set off alarm bells.” She deleted the message, but related her experience on social media to warn others.

American voters face an especially pivotal, polarized election this year, and scammers here and abroad are taking notice — posing as fundraiser­s and pollsters, impersonat­ing candidates and campaigns, and launching fake voter registrati­on drives. It’s not votes they’re after, but to win a voter’s trust, personal informatio­n and maybe a bank routing number.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, the Better Business Bureau and cybersecur­ity experts have recently warned of new and increasing­ly sophistica­ted online fraud schemes that use the election as an entry, reflecting both the proliferat­ion of political misinforma­tion and intense interest in this year’s presidenti­al and Senate races.

“Psychologi­cally, these scams play to our desire to do something — to get involved, to donate, to take action,” said Sam Small, chief security officer at ZeroFOX, a Baltimore, Maryland-based digital security firm.

Online grifters regularly shift tactics to fit current events, whether they are natural disasters, a pandemic or an election, according to Small. “Give them something to work with and they’ll find a way to make a dollar,” he said.

Foreign adversarie­s like Russia, China and Iran get much of the blame for creating fake social media accounts and spreading deceptive election informatio­n, largely because of efforts by groups linked to the Kremlin to interfere in the 2016 U. S. presidenti­al election. In many instances, foreign disinforma­tion campaigns make use of the same tools pioneered by cybercrimi­nals: fake social media accounts, realistic looking websites and and suspicious links.

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