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Tag: Election security

  • How could midterm elections change under Trump?

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    President Donald Trump wants to change the way Americans vote and he wants to do it before the 2026 midterms.

    U.S. presidents do not have the authority to overhaul state election laws. The Constitution leaves congressional election management to states and rulemaking to Congress. 

    That hasn’t stopped Trump from taking a top-down approach to altering election practices a year out from the Nov. 3, 2026, elections — contests that will determine whether Trump has congressional support for his agenda, including his immigration enforcement tactics and tax and spending cuts. 

    Here are some of the ways Trump is pressuring states and Congress to change how those elections will go:

    • Trump resumed his attacks on voting by mail, threatening in August to use an executive order to write a legally shaky ban of the practice used by tens of millions of Americans.

    • Trump’s Justice Department asked most states to turn over voter data rolls in its search for ineligible voters, setting up a legal fight and potentially jeopardizing the rights of U.S. citizens who are eligible to vote. 

    • The Trump administration scaled back efforts to improve voting site security and mail ballot protection. 

    • Trump successfully encouraged Republican governors to redistrict to give his party more House seats. In response, Californians will vote Nov. 4 on whether they want to redistrict to balance out Republican efforts. 

    Trump relied on falsehoods when pushing for voting changes in a speech to governors, repeatedly made the Pants on Fire statement that the 2020 election was “rigged,” and threatened to jail people he said rigged the election. 

    We asked the White House why Trump wants to overhaul elections. He won under 2016 and 2024 laws, and his party won Congress in 2024. The White House referred us to the Justice Department.

    “Clean voter rolls and basic election safeguards are requisites for free, fair, and transparent elections,” Harmeet K. Dhillon, an assistant attorney general, told PolitiFact. “The DOJ Civil Rights Division has a statutory mandate to enforce our federal voting rights laws, and ensuring the public’s confidence in the integrity of our elections is a top priority of this administration.”

    Trump’s actions have alarmed election officials who vow to protect the rights of voters during the midterms.

    “I am confident we will have safe, free and secure elections in 2026, but it is going to be up to state and local election officials because the federal government right now is not being supportive and indeed is targeting election officials,” said Shenna Bellows, Maine’s secretary of state and a Democratic gubernatorial candidate. 

    Collecting state voter registration data, searching for noncitizen voters

    Students register to vote for school board elections during a town hall at Bethany Baptist Church, Feb. 1, 2025, in Newark, New Jersey. (AP)

    In its search to identify ineligible voters, the Justice Department has requested voter registration files from most states.

    Voter registration rolls have sensitive personal identifying information. Many states have laws that would prohibit them from disclosing information such as birth dates and driver’s license or Social Security numbers. Election experts have raised privacy concerns about voters’ identifying information being widely shared, pointing to similar concerns involving the Department of Government Efficiency’s use of Social Security data.

    Some states provided only publicly available data to the federal government.

    Maine’s Bellows told Trump’s Justice Department to “go jump in the Gulf of Maine.”

    Maine was among the states the Justice Department sued in September, accusing them of not turning over certain voter roll information.

    In its lawsuit against Maine, the department demanded Bellows hand over all information on the state’s voter rolls, including Social Security or driver’s license numbers. Maine opposes releasing that information because centralization of voter data increases the possibility of breach, Bellows told PolitiFact. 

    “Voting in a democracy depends on free and fair participation without fear of retribution or punishment from the government,” Bellows said. “If Congress thought it was a good idea to have a national voter registration list they could authorize that, but they have not done so.”

    The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s law school found that nearly all the states that replied to the requests did not share their full databases. The states omitted Social Security and driver’s license numbers or provided no lists. Only Indiana and Wyoming provided their full statewide voter registration lists.

    Across the country, voter roll maintenance is handled by state and local officials who routinely remove people who have relocated, died or are otherwise ineligible. Federal law, meanwhile, already bans noncitizens from voting in federal elections. But Trump has spread falsehoods about noncitizen voting for a decade.

    Following reports by Reuters and the New York Times, a Homeland Security spokesperson confirmed to PolitiFact that it is sharing information with the Justice Department with the goal of identifying noncitizen voters. 

    The Trump administration has taken other steps in an effort to find noncitizen voters, such as overhauling a database that election officials use to verify voters’ citizenship status. Voting rights advocates have cautioned that the data might be outdated if an immigrant later became a naturalized U.S. citizen.

    RELATED TRUMP FACT-CHECK: Trump’s claim that millions of immigrants are signing up to vote illegally is Pants on Fire!

    Threat to end mail-in voting

    A county worker loads mail-in ballots into a scanner that records the votes at a tabulating area at the Clark County Election Department in Las Vegas on Oct. 29, 2020. (AP)

    On Aug. 18, Trump said he will move to “end mail-in ballots” and sign an “executive order to help bring honesty to the 2026 elections.” Any attempt to abolish or overhaul states’ voting by mail programs would face legal challenges, which may explain why the order has not materialized. 

    The following day, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt signaled Trump could pursue a legislative route, saying there “will be many discussions with our friends on Capitol Hill, and also our friends in state legislatures.” 

    Trump has continued his threats against mail-in voting, vowing in September “to fix this system.” 

    “No mail-in or ‘Early’ Voting” he echoed in an Oct. 26 Truth Social post that criticized California for sending millions of mail ballots for the redistricting vote. 

    The state is one of eight that allows all mail elections. In the November 2024 election, about 30% of voters, or about 48 million people, cast ballots by mail, including people who are elderly, can’t drive, live far from a voting site or are overseas. Mail-in voting has been around at least since the Civil War.

    In March, Trump issued an executive order that would cut off Election Assistance Commission funding to states that count mail ballots received after Election Day. The order, which has an exception for military and overseas voters, has led to multiple lawsuits. 

    About 16 states allow officials to count ballots received after Election Day, as long as they were postmarked by Election Day (or in the case of Ohio, the day before Election Day), according to the National Vote at Home Institute.

    The White House position is that federal laws establish Election Day as the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November so that should be the mail ballot receipt deadline.

    Nineteen states together sued the administration, arguing that the Constitution gives the states the primary responsibility to regulate elections. (The states of Washington and Oregon filed their own lawsuit.) A U.S. District Court judge preliminarily blocked that provision in Trump’s order.

    Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, said voters should pay attention to Trump’s attempts to stretch his legal authority and tangle with states. 

    “I think the next six months or so will be crucial in making sure we remain on course and elections are fair, accurate, honest and secure,” Simon said.

    RELATED TRUMP FACT-CHECK: Trump said the US is the ‘only country’ that uses mail-in voting. That’s wrong.

    Redistricting pressure in GOP-led states

    Trump pushed Republican-led states to undertake unusual mid-decade redistricting to maximize congressional GOP seats. 

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a new map in August that Republicans hope will lead to five additional seats. Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe also signed a new map into law, though voters are collecting signatures in hopes of holding a referendum to overturn that map in 2026. Ohio’s redistricting commission settled on a new map, as did the North Carolina legislature.

    Other Republican-led states, including Florida, Indiana and Louisiana, could follow.

    Some Democratic leaders have floated redistricting their states to wipe out Republican gains. California voters will decide Nov. 4 if they want to redistrict in an effort led by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. Democrats have also pushed for redistricting in Virginia, Maryland and Illinois. 

    If Trump’s efforts to create more Republican House seats are successful, it would make it even harder for the Democrats to flip the House.

    Scaled back election security assistance

    A spot that had been reserved for a representative of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency sits vacant at a meeting of the National Association of State Election Directors in Washington, Feb. 2, 2025. (AP)

    Trump created the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency during his first term to protect critical infrastructure, including elections, from threats. CISA became a target of Trump after the agency affirmed the security of the 2020 election.

    CISA has provided training, threat information and physical and cybersecurity assessments of election facilities with election officials, improving security for voters.

    It’s unclear what role CISA will play in the 2026 elections. Any reduced federal response to election security could harm voters’ faith in elections and embolden domestic or foreign bad actors.

    A former government official told Axios that about one-third of CISA staff left the agency by early June, a few months after CISA froze its election security work pending a review and did not publicly release the results. The administration also cut funding for an information-sharing collaboration among local, state and federal officials. Trump’s budget proposal for 2026 calls for further cuts. 

    Because of CISA security training, Rhode Island election workers knew how to respond when an envelope containing white powder with the return address: “U.S. Traitor Elimination Army” arrived at the state Board of Elections in September 2024. CISA had already distributed physical security  and cybersecurity checklists with tips about how to respond to such a threat. 

    The substance turned out not to be dangerous, but the quick security alerts and information from CISA helps election officials “know what is happening in real time without having to wait for news reports or word of mouth,” Nick Lima, elections director for the city of Cranston, Rhode Island, told PolitiFact. 

    So far, John C. Ackerman, the county clerk/recorder in Tazewell County, Illinois, said he hasn’t seen fewer services from CISA. He told PolitiFact the agency still sends bulletins about threats and a monthly vulnerability scan of the county’s website.

    When we asked CISA if it still offers security assessments and additional assistance to election officials, we received a statement that did not address our questions. 

    The Trump administration has hired people in election roles who denied Trump’s 2020 loss or spread falsehoods about voting. 

    Heather Honey, a Pennsylvania activist who spread election falsehoods, now works in an election integrity role at Homeland Security. Marci McCarthy, now the CISA spokesperson, chaired the DeKalb County Republican Party, which filed an unsuccessful lawsuit arguing that Georgia voting machines were vulnerable. As FBI director, Kash Patel — who has repeated Trump’s falsehood about a rigged 2020 election — could oversee investigations of election crimes and election-related civil rights violations.

    Michael Moore, the chief information security officer for Arizona’s secretary of state, told PolitiFact in an email that while there are still employees at CISA who want to help, “It seems they have neither the resources nor direction to effectively help.”

    “I strongly believe in the mission of CISA and want a return of our prior relationship and support level,” Moore said. “We’re the United States of America for a reason. In this current landscape it feels more like every state for themselves.”

    RELATED FACT-CHECK: Trump falsely calls 2020 election ‘rigged’ in memo targeting former cybersecurity leader

    RELATED: MAGA-Meter: Trump’s promise to require proof of citizenship at the polls

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  • Extra security installed around DC ahead of Election Day – WTOP News

    Extra security installed around DC ahead of Election Day – WTOP News

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    The U.S. Secret Service told WTOP that they are working with local and state partners “to ensure the heightened levels of safety and security this Election Day.”

    U.S. Capitol Police keep watch at the Capitol in D.C. as the Monday, Nov. 4, 2024.
    (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

    Pedestrians walk past metal security barriers on a street leading to the White House in Washington, Monday, Nov. 4, 2024, in advance of election day. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
    Pedestrians walk past metal security barriers on a street leading to the White House in D.C., Monday, Nov. 4, 2024, in advance of election day.
    (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

    AP Photo/Ben Curtis

    A pedestrian walks past stores open for business but boarded up with wood, near the White House in Washington, Monday, Nov. 4, 2024, in advance of Election Day. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
    A pedestrian walks past stores open for business but boarded up with wood, near the White House on Monday, Nov. 4, 2024, in advance of Election Day.
    (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

    AP Photo/Ben Curtis

    Security bike racks stand outside the US Capitol ahead of the National Women's March in Washington, DC, on November 2, 2024. (Photo by Allison ROBBERT / AFP) (Photo by ALLISON ROBBERT/AFP via Getty Images)
    Security bike racks stand outside the U.S. Capitol ahead of the National Women’s March in D.C. on Nov. 2, 2024
    (Photo by ALLISON Robert/AFP via Getty Images)

    Photo by ALLISON Robert/AFP via Getty Images

    The Naval Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue in Northwest D.C. was surrounded by additional black riot fencing Monday before Election Day.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 03: Workers erect anti-scale fencing around the White House and the Treasury Department along 15th St NW on November 03, 2024 in Washington, DC. The nation's capital is bracing for protests and potential unrest, as a contentious Election Day is approaching.  (Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)
    Workers erect anti-scale fencing around the White House and the Treasury Department along 15th St NW on Nov. 3, 2024 in D.C.
    (Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

    Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images

    WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 03:  Workers erect anti-scale fencing around the White House and the Treasury Department along 15th St NW on November 03, 2024 in Washington, DC. The nation's capital is bracing for protests and potential unrest, as a contentious Election Day is approaching.  (Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)
    Workers erect anti-scale fencing around the White House and the Treasury Department along 15th St NW on Nov. 3, 2024 in D.C.
    (Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

    Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images

    Naval Observatory
    The Naval Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue in Northwest D.C. has been surrounded by additional black riot fencing Monday before Election Day.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    The Naval Observatory, where one of two Master Clock facilities are located, is enclosed behind black security fencing days before Election Day.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Sign up for WTOP’s Election Desk weekly newsletter to stay up-to-date through Election Day 2024 with the latest developments in this historic presidential election cycle.

    As millions of Americans prepare to decide the next president of the United States, extra security measures have been put in place around D.C. in anticipation of Election Day.

    Fortifications go up around key facilities

    Crews have been seen setting up black riot fencing around the U.S. Capitol building throughout the weekend, a sight that has become all too familiar in D.C.

    In addition, the U.S. Secret Service told WTOP they are working with local and state partners “to ensure the heightened levels of safety and security this Election Day.”

    The Naval Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue in Northwest D.C., where Vice President Kamala Harris lives, is also surrounded by additional black riot fencing, enclosing one of the nation’s master clocks, which keeps the accurate time of the East Coast.

    That same fencing was put up around the White House, as well as the Palm Beach County Convention Center in Florida where former President Donald Trump will host his election night watch party.

    Harris’ watch party will take place at her Alma Mater Howard University. D.C. police said the security surrounding the school will be increased and road closures will begin for a dozen streets at 7 p.m. Monday.

    “These enhancements are not in response to any specific issue but are part of wide-ranging public safety preparations for Tuesday’s election,” the Secret Service said in a statement to WTOP.

    During security briefings for media last month, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said to expect “hardened” security around the Capitol Complex, including more law enforcement.

    Police to use helicopter, drones in security plan

    During a news conference Monday, D.C. police Chief Pamela Smith said the city’s Joint Operations Center will be activated Tuesday morning, and there will be increased patrols in key areas Downtown and near the White House.

    “There will be no tolerance for violence in our city, no destruction or any unlawful behavior,” Smith said. “As I’ve said before, we will hold all offenders accountable. We will not tolerate the destruction of property and we will not tolerate threats to public safety, as well as this election process.”

    The chief also said D.C. police will leverage its new helicopter, Falcon 1, and drones to monitor and protect critical areas during the election process.

    “We made these investments to strengthen our air support assets this year for the very purpose of managing and protecting events that bring large crowds to our city,” Smith said.

    Bowser said Monday the city will make a National Guard request for assistance sometime between now and Inauguration Day, though she didn’t share specifically when that request would be made.

    She was also quick to note there are no credible threats of violence in D.C. ahead of Election Day on Tuesday. She that while she feels good about the city’s preparation, it’s a different story when it comes to the political landscape.

    “I feel very sad, the state of things, to be honest with you,” Bowser said. “But the way that I deal with anxiety is to work and to make sure that we are as prepared as we can be and that people, all people, win or lose, do the right thing. And that is important.”


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    Luke Lukert

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  • AI-generated news offers unchecked path to misinformation as elections approach

    AI-generated news offers unchecked path to misinformation as elections approach

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    A new issue is emerging as unchecked artificial intelligence continues to permeate online: There’s an explosion of websites that look like news sites — but they’re automated through AI. Hearst Television’s National Investigative Unit spoke with several secretaries of state, the people ultimately responsible for conducting elections in their states, who said there are real concerns that stealth uses of AI in this manner could influence the outcome of elections across the country. Maine Secretary of State targetedMaine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows knows about the impact of misinformation all too well.According to online articles from what appeared to be a news website, she was arrested, served time at Guantanamo Bay — and was executed. But none of it was true. “We were in this awkward position of having to explain, to some media outlets, like USA Today, also to some voters, ‘No, I’m alive and well. I’m, you know, here in Maine doing my work,’” Bellows said.Those stories clearly can have a lot of power. As the secretary of state, Bellows is the one in charge of running Maine’s elections.That is why she has been targeted, both by people and AI, with articles about her filled with incorrect information.Stories on these websites are written by bots, allowing for potential misinformation and disinformation to be published with little to no human oversight.A growing problemAI-powered websites are becoming more of a problem, according to Steven Brill, co-founder and CEO of NewsGuard, an organization that provides tools to counter misinformation. “We started with 40 or 50, and that has just exploded,” Brill told the National Investigative Unit. “A month from now, it could be 1,200. If I’m talking to you right before Election Day, I’ll bet it’s over 2,000.”Brill’s team is tracking more than 1,000 websites run by AI that spread false narratives. The websites the organization is tracking appear to be predominantly automated, using a script to scrape authentic news sites and rewrite the articles using AI, twisting the facts.These sites can gain significant traction on the internet, especially through social media. “They can get thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of views,” Brill said. “So the website itself is really just kind of a marker of false legitimacy.”Many of the websites are targeting the election, according to Brill.These websites can also be difficult to distinguish from legitimate news sites because they sometimes have generic names that are close to trusted news brands and are laid out in a way that mimics them. Some of these AI-powered sites even have multiple sections, articles, author bylines and advertisements. “You can only imagine how that is going to accelerate as we get closer to the election,” Brill said.What’s being done to stop AI and misinformation online? Social media websites like Facebook and X, formerly known as Twitter, have vowed to flag articles that contain misinformation and disinformation.Some states are even passing laws, adopting resolutions and/or enacting legislation to address the use of AI in different ways.Explore the map below to discover the laws across the nation. How can you tell if a website is AI-generated?AI is constantly evolving, so as time goes on, it will be harder to distinguish these sites from human-written ones. That’s why it’s important to choose trusted news sources. Below are basic tips and red flags when evaluating news sites.Check the “About” and “Privacy Policy” pages Trusted news sites almost always have “About Us” and/or “Privacy Policy” pages, which offer transparent information for readers about the organization and its ethics. Readers can find ours here. But some AI sites have overlooked key details on these pages. Some sites may say these pages are still being developed. For example, “This website was founded in by .” The more generic the language, the better the chance that there is some automation involved. It’s rare, but some might actually state the website is generated by AI or that the content has been written for “satire” and isn’t based on facts.No background on the author? Take the author’s name and type it into Google. If they don’t have any past work, that’s a red flag. Experts say AI “authors” will produce more content as time goes on, so be critical when looking at past work.If the article attributes the writing to “Admin” and “Editor,” or has no bylines at all, that’s another red flag.Readers may also want to examine the author more closely. The Hearst Television National Investigative Unit found at least one of these websites using the author bylines of real reporters, but further investigation showed no real connection between those reporters and the suspect articles.Scan for text that seems too formal or out of place”In conclusion,” is a common phrase that appears at the end of many AI articles, but it’s something human journalists rarely, if ever, use.Experts say artificial intelligence systems are meant to produce “helpful” responses, and that sometimes includes language that isn’t conversational. If the language used feels too formal or too jargony, it’s another red flag.Sentences that are repeated multiple timesAI-generated articles sometimes contained repeated concepts or even whole sentences in their copy. Human journalists and editors would likely have removed or refined these statements. Check the contextAI lacks a human understanding of the world. So, if the story seems unable to grasp a larger context or is missing the point entirely, think twice about it.Experts say that AI tries to predict the next word in a phrase or sentence, not produce facts. These articles often miss out on broader context.Check the sourcesA legitimate news article may frequently use citations and hyperlinks to link you to sources of information.Also, if the headline is not posted anywhere else, be skeptical. Look for other sources, particularly ones that you’ve heard of and trust.

    A new issue is emerging as unchecked artificial intelligence continues to permeate online: There’s an explosion of websites that look like news sites — but they’re automated through AI.

    Hearst Television’s National Investigative Unit spoke with several secretaries of state, the people ultimately responsible for conducting elections in their states, who said there are real concerns that stealth uses of AI in this manner could influence the outcome of elections across the country.

    Maine Secretary of State targeted

    Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows knows about the impact of misinformation all too well.

    According to online articles from what appeared to be a news website, she was arrested, served time at Guantanamo Bay — and was executed. But none of it was true.

    “We were in this awkward position of having to explain, to some media outlets, like USA Today, also to some voters, ‘No, I’m alive and well. I’m, you know, here in Maine doing my work,’” Bellows said.

    Hearst Television

    Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows

    Those stories clearly can have a lot of power.

    As the secretary of state, Bellows is the one in charge of running Maine’s elections.

    That is why she has been targeted, both by people and AI, with articles about her filled with incorrect information.

    Stories on these websites are written by bots, allowing for potential misinformation and disinformation to be published with little to no human oversight.

    A growing problem

    AI-powered websites are becoming more of a problem, according to Steven Brill, co-founder and CEO of NewsGuard, an organization that provides tools to counter misinformation.

    “We started with 40 or 50, and that has just exploded,” Brill told the National Investigative Unit. “A month from now, it could be 1,200. If I’m talking to you right before Election Day, I’ll bet it’s over 2,000.”

    steven brill, co-founder and ceo of newsguard

    Hearst Television

    Steven Brill, co-founder and CEO of NewsGuard

    Brill’s team is tracking more than 1,000 websites run by AI that spread false narratives. The websites the organization is tracking appear to be predominantly automated, using a script to scrape authentic news sites and rewrite the articles using AI, twisting the facts.

    These sites can gain significant traction on the internet, especially through social media.

    “They can get thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of views,” Brill said. “So the website itself is really just kind of a marker of false legitimacy.”

    Many of the websites are targeting the election, according to Brill.

    These websites can also be difficult to distinguish from legitimate news sites because they sometimes have generic names that are close to trusted news brands and are laid out in a way that mimics them. Some of these AI-powered sites even have multiple sections, articles, author bylines and advertisements.

    “You can only imagine how that is going to accelerate as we get closer to the election,” Brill said.

    What’s being done to stop AI and misinformation online?

    Social media websites like Facebook and X, formerly known as Twitter, have vowed to flag articles that contain misinformation and disinformation.

    Some states are even passing laws, adopting resolutions and/or enacting legislation to address the use of AI in different ways.

    Explore the map below to discover the laws across the nation.

    How can you tell if a website is AI-generated?

    AI is constantly evolving, so as time goes on, it will be harder to distinguish these sites from human-written ones. That’s why it’s important to choose trusted news sources.

    Below are basic tips and red flags when evaluating news sites.

    Check the “About” and “Privacy Policy” pages

    Trusted news sites almost always have “About Us” and/or “Privacy Policy” pages, which offer transparent information for readers about the organization and its ethics. Readers can find ours here.

    But some AI sites have overlooked key details on these pages. Some sites may say these pages are still being developed. For example, “This website was founded in [date] by [Your Name].” The more generic the language, the better the chance that there is some automation involved. It’s rare, but some might actually state the website is generated by AI or that the content has been written for “satire” and isn’t based on facts.

    No background on the author?

    Take the author’s name and type it into Google. If they don’t have any past work, that’s a red flag. Experts say AI “authors” will produce more content as time goes on, so be critical when looking at past work.

    If the article attributes the writing to “Admin” and “Editor,” or has no bylines at all, that’s another red flag.

    Readers may also want to examine the author more closely. The Hearst Television National Investigative Unit found at least one of these websites using the author bylines of real reporters, but further investigation showed no real connection between those reporters and the suspect articles.

    Scan for text that seems too formal or out of place

    “In conclusion,” is a common phrase that appears at the end of many AI articles, but it’s something human journalists rarely, if ever, use.

    Experts say artificial intelligence systems are meant to produce “helpful” responses, and that sometimes includes language that isn’t conversational. If the language used feels too formal or too jargony, it’s another red flag.

    Sentences that are repeated multiple times

    AI-generated articles sometimes contained repeated concepts or even whole sentences in their copy. Human journalists and editors would likely have removed or refined these statements.

    Check the context

    AI lacks a human understanding of the world. So, if the story seems unable to grasp a larger context or is missing the point entirely, think twice about it.

    Experts say that AI tries to predict the next word in a phrase or sentence, not produce facts. These articles often miss out on broader context.

    Check the sources

    A legitimate news article may frequently use citations and hyperlinks to link you to sources of information.

    Also, if the headline is not posted anywhere else, be skeptical. Look for other sources, particularly ones that you’ve heard of and trust.

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  • Brussels spyware bombshell: Surveillance software found on officials’ phones

    Brussels spyware bombshell: Surveillance software found on officials’ phones

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    The European Parliament is on high alert for cyberattacks and foreign interference in the run-up to the EU election in June.

    POLITICO reported in December that an internal review showed that the institution’s cybersecurity “has not yet met industry standards” and is “not fully in-line with the threat level” posed by state-sponsored hackers and other threat groups.

    One member of the security and defense subcommittee went in for a routine check on Tuesday, which resulted in a discovery of traces of spyware on their phone. The member told POLITICO it wasn’t immediately clear why they were targeted with hacking software.

    Parliament’s Deputy Spokesperson Delphine Colard said in a statement that “traces found in two devices” prompted the email calling on members to have their phones checked.

    “In the given geopolitical context and given the nature of the files followed by the subcommittee on security and defence, a special attention is dedicated to the devices of the members of this subcommittee and the staff supporting its work,” the statement said.

    The new revelations follow previous incidents with other European Parliament members targeted with spyware. Researchers revealed in 2022 that the phones of members of the Catalan independence movement, including EU politicians, were infected with Pegasus and Candiru, two types of hacking tools. That same year, Greek member of the EU Parliament and opposition leader Nikos Androulakis was among a list of Greek political and public figures found to have been targeted with Predator, another spyware tool. Parliament’s President Roberta Metsola previously also faced an attempted hacking using spyware.

    European Parliament members in 2022 set up a special inquiry committee to investigate the issue. It investigated a series of scandals in countries including Spain, Greece, Hungary and Poland and said at least four governments in the EU had abused the hacking tools for political gain.

    Parliament’s IT service launched a system to check members’ phones for spyware in April last year. It had run “hundreds of operations” since the program started, the statement said.

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    Antoaneta Roussi

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  • New trove of emails and documents turned over to prosecutors in Georgia election subversion case | CNN Politics

    New trove of emails and documents turned over to prosecutors in Georgia election subversion case | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    A trove of emails and documents uncovered by state investigators looking into a voting systems breach in Georgia is being turned over to the Fulton County prosecutors who brought the sweeping racketeering case against former President Donald Trump and his allies.

    More than 15,000 emails and documents connected to Misty Hampton, the former election supervisor for Coffee County, were discovered this month by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation – after attorneys for the rural county’s board of elections claimed the information had been lost.

    Hampton has been charged alongside Trump and 17 other co-defendants with trying to subvert the 2020 election results in Georgia. She has been accused of facilitating the unlawful breach of Coffee County’s voting systems.

    The Georgia Bureau of Investigation had been looking into the Coffee County incident since the summer of 2022. Earlier this month, the agency completed its investigation and gave the case file to Fulton County prosecutors to be included as part of discovery to be turned over to defendants in the Trump election interference case.

    While it’s unclear what’s in the trove of emails and documents, the Coffee County breach features prominently in the Fulton County indictment. Prosecutors say Trump allies illegally breached the voting systems in hopes of finding proof that the election was fraudulent. Prosecutors also have evidence tying Trump campaign lawyers to the breach.

    Sidney Powell, the former Trump campaign attorney charged with crimes stemming from the Coffee County voting systems breach, has centered her defense around the claim that access to the data was authorized by Hampton. Powell and pro-Trump lawyer Kenneth Chesebro are the first two defendants to go to trial, with jury selection set to begin Friday.

    In text messages previously obtained by CNN, Hampton allegedly gave Trump attorneys a “written invitation” to access Georgia voting systems.

    RELATED: Georgia prosecutors have messages showing Trump’s team is behind voting system breach

    Hampton’s attorney Jonathan Miller said he believes that the newly discovered emails and content will exonerate her.

    “There is nothing in the 15,000 emails that would do anything to make my client culpable of a crime, and I look forward to reviewing it all,” Miller told CNN. “She was acting under authority of Georgia statutes in doing what she did, and the evidence is going to show that. She did not commit any crimes.”

    Hampton and Powell each face seven charges in Fulton County, including conspiracy to commit election fraud and computer trespassing, in addition to racketeering. A trial date for Hampton has not been set, and Miller said his client has not received a plea offer she is “willing to facilitate.”

    All but one defendant, bail bondsman Scott Hall, who has agreed to testify for the prosecution, have pleaded not guilty.

    The security of Georgia’s elections had been the subject of litigation even before the 2020 presidential contest. The Coalition for Good Governance, a nonprofit organization, sued the Georgia secretary of state over the issue in 2017. Hampton’s alleged involvement in the Coffee County breach came to light as part of that ongoing civil lawsuit.

    “Few people believed the bizarre claims made by the Coffee County Board of Elections and their attorneys that Misty Hampton’s emails were suddenly lost shortly after she was terminated in February 2021,” the coalition said in a statement.

    The board of elections did not respond to CNN’s request for comment.

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  • Greece’s conservatives achieve landslide victory but fall short of majority

    Greece’s conservatives achieve landslide victory but fall short of majority

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    ATHENS — Greece’s conservative ruling party achieved a landslide victory in Sunday’s election, but it will have to wait for a second vote later this summer in its bid to secure an outright majority.

    The New Democracy party of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis managed to gain a double-digit lead over its main rival, the left-wing Syriza party, and was missing only a few seats for a majority even with the new proportional representation system, according to early results.

    “The political earthquake that occurred today calls on all of us to accelerate the process for a final governmental solution,” Mitsotakis declared Sunday evening from his party headquarters.

    “The data from the ballot box is catalytic — it proves that New Democracy has the approval to govern independently and strongly and they demanded it emphatically, in an absolute way,” he said.

    With 75 percent of the votes counted, New Democracy was poised to get 40.8 percent of the vote and 145 seats in the 300-seat parliament. Syriza was lagging with only 20.1 percent and 72 seats, while the Socialist Pasok party had 11.7 percent and 42 seats. The Communists KKE had 7.1 percent and 25 seats and the nationalist Greek Solution 4.5 percent and 16 seats.

    Three smaller parties that initially looked poised to get 3 percent and top the threshold to make it to parliament, eventually scored lower. The participation rate was at 59.2 percent, the Interior Ministry reported.

    Nonetheless, New Democracy didn’t gather the percentage of votes — 45 percent — needed to win an outright majority.

    Mitsotakis managed to gain among voters despite his premiership being burdened with a spying scandal, spiraling inflation and mounting concerns over the rule of law.

    “Our collective bodies will be convened immediately in order to evaluate the election results,” said Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras, calling the results extremely negative for his party.

    However, he said “the election cycle is not yet over, as there will probably be a second election and therefore, we do not have the time to wait. We must immediately make all changes necessary, in order to give the best possible conditions to the next crucial and final electoral battle.”

    “It is a devastating outcome for the opposition, especially for Syriza,” said Wolfango Piccoli, co-founder of risk analysis company Teneo.

    “It will take a long time for the main opposition party to recover, leaving New Democracy in a position to dominate Greek politics and run the government with no meaningful scrutiny,” he said.

    “The outcome of today’s vote will be welcome by investors, but ND’s dominance of the political system together with a weak opposition may raise concerns about clientelism and the quality of policy-making,” Piccoli added.

    “The resounding victory of New Democracy sends a clear and undisputed message all over Europe,” said Thanasis Bakolas, the center-right European People’s Party secretary general, adding that this is the first time since 2000 in Greece that the incumbent government emerges stronger after its term.

    “A message to Brussels? — Today’s electoral result is a clear message against all those outside Greece who have consistently questioned the quality of Greek democracy and the will of the Greek people,” Bakolas added.

    Starting from Monday, each of the three leading parties will get the mandate to form a government, starting with the winner, before passing to the second and then third party. Each one will have up to three days to try to form a government.

    If there is no agreement on a coalition, the parliament elected on Sunday will be sworn in and then dissolved, paving the way for a second round of elections to take place and a caretaker government will be sworn in.

    Bolstered by his triumph, Mitsotakis is expected to immediately seek a second vote, rejecting the option of a coalition after this first round of voting.

    That means Greeks will probably head to the ballot boxes again on June 25 or July 2, with New Democracy poised to gain an outright majority, thanks to a system that grants the winning party in the second round up to 50 bonus seats.

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    Nektaria Stamouli

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