Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Latvia forewarns election meddlers

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A nondescrip­t office in Riga’s communist-era Institute of Mathematic­s and Computer Science is potentiall­y Latvia’s last line of defense against threats to next month’s general election.

There, the nation’s 29-strong CERT cybersecur­ity group is bracing for its biggest test to date: repelling attempts by Russia to sway the voting process. Having studied meddling in the U.S. and fellow European Union members like Germany, the team is schooling state employees on suspicious emails and website links that could be phishing attempts, all the while receiving “threat feeds” from NATO and allied countries.

Elsewhere, the government is working with Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. to stem the spread of fake news. Ballots at the Oct. 6 vote will be scanned electronic­ally and can be counted by hand, should concerns arise at any precinct, adding an extra layer of security.

“The awareness that something could happen is clearly much higher” than during the last election, Varis Teivans, CERT’s deputy head, said in an interview in a secure room containing some basic furniture but no computers. “It’s clear our big neighbor, Russia, has carried out offensive cyber operations against the Baltic states.”

Latvia has particular grounds to be wary: At a quarter, ethnic Russians are a bigger chunk of the population than in Estonia or Lithuania, making the country an attractive target for Putin to try to sow discord inside the EU. On top of that, a political party catering to the Russian minority may have its best shot at taking power for more than a decade.

Latvian Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis said during an EU summit last week that coordinati­on is necessary to fight misinforma­tion and cyberattac­ks.

Russia, whose Internet trolls also targeted the U.K.’s Brexit referendum, vehemently denies interferin­g abroad. The Kremlin declined to comment.

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