US Cybersecurity Agency Director Jane Easterly said Monday that her department has not seen evidence of any activity that could directly affect the outcome of the election, despite the rise in misinformation.
She added that the 2024 elections faced an “unprecedented amount of disinformation” from foreign adversaries.
US agencies have warned that Russia and others intend to stir up divisive narratives ahead of the election, an accusation Russia has denied.
US Election 2024: Behind the growing gender gap between Harris and Trump supporters
Georgia state officials last week described a fake video circulating online of a Haitian immigrant holding multiple Georgia identities and claiming to have voted multiple times as “targeted misinformation.” In a statement, senior US intelligence officials linked the video to Russia.
Trending now
-
3 charged at Brampton Hindu temple protest while Modi was in India weighing in
-
When will we know the winner of the US elections? Probably not right away
Story continues below ad
A senior official at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said there was a high likelihood that foreign disinformation efforts would continue in the weeks and months after the election until Jan. 6.
Get breaking national news
For news affecting Canada and around the world, sign up to get breaking news alerts delivered to you right as they happen.
“The election infrastructure has never been more secure and the election community has never been more prepared to deliver safe, secure, free and fair elections,” Easterly said.
—Christopher Bing reports