Here’s the latest on election security as of now.
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Overview of current environment
- U.S. election security agencies report ongoing vigilance against threats to voting infrastructure, with federal and state partners coordinating to monitor and respond to any incidents. Recent briefings have emphasized a maintained defensive posture and readiness to address cyber and physical threats.
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Notable recent developments
- Federal agencies continue to publish and update guidelines for securing election systems, including prioritizing backup processes, secure software update practices, and incident response playbooks for local election offices. These efforts aim to reduce risk from cyber intrusions and misinformation campaigns.
- Law enforcement and intelligence communities have stressed that while threats persist, there have not been widespread, system-wide outages or failures in the most recent election cycles, due in part to defensive investments and information-sharing networks.
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Public-facing guidance for voters and officials
- Election offices are encouraged to communicate clearly about voting procedures, safeguard measures at polling locations, and how to report anomalies or suspicious activity. Training and resource guides for officials emphasize redundancy, paper backups where feasible, and transparent incident reporting.
- Voters should rely on official channels for information, verify candidate information and ballot wording via official election websites, and report any suspicious online content to the appropriate authorities.
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Common threats to watch
- Disinformation campaigns that aim to undermine trust in results, and phishing or malware targeting election staff or vendor systems remain documented concerns. Officials routinely advise verifying information through trusted sources and maintaining strong credential hygiene across election teams.
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What to expect next
- Ongoing reviews and exercises are expected as jurisdictions test continuity of operations, with updates to security inventories and incident response plans ahead of future elections. Expect further official statements detailing threat assessments and mitigations as new information emerges.
If you want, I can pull the latest specific headlines from a few major outlets and summarize them, or set up a quick alert checklist for your local area (Los Angeles) so you stay updated on any security advisories affecting your region.
Sources
The Department of Justice has agreed to keep its federal monitors from entering Texas polling locations on Election Day – a victory for Attorney General Ken Paxton who sued the department earlier. According to the agreement, election monitors from DOJ will remain outside of polling and central count locations. … The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is not tracking any "national level significant incidents" on election day, according to a top CISA official. Cait Conley, a...
abcnews.comFebruary 13 - A group of MIT researchers found that Voatz, an online voting application being tested in five states, is susceptible to hacks that can alter, block or expose voters’ ballots. February 11 - The Department of Homeland Security released four major objectives as part of its #Protect2020 Strategic Plan for cybersecurity. The plan includes expanded circulation of its "planning and emergency response guides” for enforcing security, continued offering of free training for election...
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www.goodmorningamerica.comThe Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is not tracking any "national level significant incidents" on election day, according to a top CISA official. Cait Conley, a senior advisor to the CISA Director and the official in charge of election security said in the early hours of voting, there haven't been any major incidents. … The FBI is monitoring criminal threats to election workers and infrastructure from a 24/7 command post set up to ensure the election is safe and secure....
abcnews.go.comFontes said his office has reason to believe the threats are from Russia, but clarified that hasn't been confirmed. "I don't know that I'm at liberty to reveal anything more than my solid suspicion grounded in information that I don't know that I can share yet," Fontes said. No polling locations were closed due to the bomb threats, Fontes said.
abcnews.com