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The Trump administration has leveled serious accusations against former President Barack Obama, alleging his involvement in a ...
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard took to social media on Wednesday with a series of bizarre infographics as ...
Bengaluru, In another case of "digital arrest", two women were allegedly held hostage on a video call for nearly nine hours ...
Beijing rolled out the red carpet for the Australian leader this week and the two sides appeared to keep a lid on tensions A ...
On Wednesday, five schools received bomb threat mails, and with that eight schools have received bomb threats since Monday, July 14.
Bruce Schneier and coauthors argue that even attempted cyberattacks on election infrastructure can erode public trust in elections' integrity across party lines.
News about cyberattacks — including those unrelated to voting — leaves even election winners with diminished confidence in the process. Education is key: It’s vital that voters understand ...
Hacks that aim to knock out election-related websites don’t mean the vote is in danger. Tech specialists with the state of Georgia, with help from external cyber experts, said they fought off a ...
Arizona's Secretary of State's office successfully repelled a cyberattack targeting its elections systems, with the Candidate Portal temporarily taken offline for security enhancements.
Cyberattacks shake voters' trust in elections, regardless of party by Ryan Shandler, Anthony J. DeMattee, Bruce Schneier, The Conversation ...
A study found that viewing news of a cyberattack lowered voter trust in election integrity – even when the voter’s candidate won and even if the attack wasn’t on voting systems.
Some voters accept election results only when their side wins. The problem isn’t just political polarization – it’s a creeping erosion of trust in the machinery of democracy itself.
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