DEEP STATE Experts war-gamed what might happen if deepfakes disrupt the 2024 election. Things went sideways fast.

Buick Electra

TB2K Girls with Guns
At least the DS is giving us a 'heads-up' on what they're going to try. Militia or BLM, I'm headed to my voting precinct.

See deep-fake videos at link!


Experts war-gamed what might happen if deepfakes disrupt the 2024 election. Things went sideways fast.​


March 16, 2024, 6:00 AM CDT
By Dan De Luce and Kevin Collier

It’s Election Day in Arizona and elderly voters in Maricopa County are told by phone that local polling places are closed due to threats from militia groups.

Meanwhile, in Miami, a flurry of photos and videos on social media show poll workers dumping ballots.

The phone calls in Arizona and the videos in Florida turn out to be “deepfakes” created with artificial intelligence tools. But by the time local and federal authorities figure out what they are dealing with, the false information has gone viral across the country.

This simulated scenario was part of a recent exercise in New York that gathered dozens of former senior U.S. and state officials, civil society leaders and executives from technology companies to rehearse for the 2024 election.

The results were sobering.

“It was jarring for folks in the room to see how quickly just a handful of these types of threats could spiral out of control and really dominate the election cycle,” said Miles Taylor, a former senior Department of Homeland Security official who helped organize the exercise for the Washington-based nonprofit The Future US.

Dubbed “The Deepfake Dilemma,” the exercise illustrated how AI-enabled tools threaten to turbocharge the spread of false information in an already polarized society and could sow chaos in the 2024 election, multiple participants told NBC News. Rather than examining a singular attack by a group or hostile regime, the exercise explored a scenario with an array of both domestic and foreign actors launching disinformation, exploiting rumors and seizing on political divisions.

The organizers and participants in the war game spoke exclusively to NBC News about how it played out.

They said it raised worrisome questions about whether federal and local officials — and the tech industry — are prepared to counter both foreign and domestic disinformation designed to undermine public confidence in the election results.

Current U.S. officials say privately they share those concerns and that some state and local election agencies will be hard-pressed to keep the election process on track.

The exercise illustrated the uncertainty surrounding the roles of federal and state agencies and tech firms seven months before what is expected to be one of the most divisive elections in U.S. history. Does the federal government have the ability to detect an AI deepfake? Should the White House or a state election office publicly declare that a particular report is false?

Unlike a natural disaster, in which government agencies work through a central command, America’s decentralized electoral system is entering uncharted territory without a clear sense of who’s in charge, said Nick Penniman, CEO of Issue One, a bipartisan organization promoting political reform and election integrity.

“Now, in the last few years, we in America are having to defend assaults on our elections from both domestic and foreign forces. We just don’t have the infrastructure or the history to do it at scale because we’ve never had to face threats this severe in the past,” said Penniman, who took part in the exercise.

“We know a hurricane is eventually going to hit our elections,” said Penniman. But in the exercise, “because patterns of working together haven’t formed, few people understood exactly how they should be coordinating with others or not.”

In a mock “White House Situation Room” around a long table, participants played assigned roles — including as directors of the FBI, CIA and the Department of Homeland Security — and sifted through the alarming reports from Arizona and Florida and numerous other unconfirmed threats, including a break-in at a postal processing center for mail-in ballots.

Conferring with the tech companies, players who were “government officials” struggled to determine the facts, who was spreading “deepfakes” and how government agencies should respond. (MSNBC anchor Alex Witt also took part in the exercise, playing the role of president of the National Association of Broadcasters.)

In the exercise, it was unclear initially that photos and video of poll workers tossing out ballots in Miami were fake. The images had gone viral, partly because of a bot-texting campaign by Russia. :rolleyes: [I'm so sick of 'Muh Russia as the DS's 'fall guy' when Putin has come out and said he'd prefer Biden as POTUS because he's more predictable].

Eventually, officials were able to establish that the whole episode was staged and then enhanced by artificial intelligence to make it look more convincing.

In this and other cases, including the fake calls to Arizona voters, the players hesitated over who should make a public announcement telling voters their polling places were safe and their ballots secure. Federal officials worried that any public statement would be seen as an attempt to boost the chances of President Joe Biden’s re-election.

“There was also a lot of debate and uncertainty about whether the White House and the president should engage,” Taylor said.

“One of the big debates in the room was whose job is it to say if something’s real or fake,” he said. “Is it the state-level election officials who say we’ve determined that there’s a fake? Is it private companies? Is it the White House?”

Said Taylor, “That’s something that we think we’re also going to see in this election cycle.”

And although the war game imagined tech executives in the room with federal officials, in reality, communication between the federal government and private firms on how to counter foreign propaganda and disinformation has sharply diminished in recent years.

The once close cooperation among federal officials, tech companies and researchers that developed after the 2016 election has unraveled due to sustained Republican attacks in Congress and court rulings discouraging federal agencies from consulting with companies about moderating online content.

The result is a potentially risky gap in safeguarding the 2024 election.

State governments lack the resources to detect an AI deepfake or to counter it quickly with accurate information, and now technology companies and some federal agencies are wary of taking a leading role, former officials and experts said.

“Everybody’s terrified of the lawsuits and ... accusations of free speech suppression,” said Kathy Boockvar, former Pennsylvania secretary of state, who took part in the exercise.

The New York war game, plus similar sessions being carried out in other states, is part of a wider effort to try to encourage more communication between tech executives and government officials, said Taylor.

But in the world outside the war game, social media platforms have cut back teams that moderate false election content, and there’s no sign those companies are ready to pursue close cooperation with government.

State and local election offices, meanwhile, face a significant shortage of experienced staff. A wave of physical and cyber threats has triggered a record exodus of election workers, leaving election agencies ill-prepared for November.

Concerned about understaffed and inexperienced state election agencies, a coalition of nonprofits and good-government groups are planning to organize a bipartisan, countrywide network of former officials, technology specialists and others to help local authorities detect deepfakes in real time and respond with accurate information.

“We’re going to have to do the best we can — independent of the federal government and the social media platforms — to try to fill the gap,” said Penniman, whose organization is involved in the election security effort.

Boockvar, the former secretary of state, said she hopes nonprofits can act as a bridge between the tech companies and the federal government, helping to maintain communication channels.

Some of the largest AI tech firms say they are introducing safeguards to their products and communicating with government officials to help bolster election security before the November vote.

“Ahead of the upcoming elections, OpenAI has put in place policies to prevent abuse, launched new features to increase transparency around AI-generated content, and developed partnerships to connect people to authoritative sources of voting information,” said a spokesperson. “We continue to work alongside governments, industry partners, and civil society toward our shared goal of protecting the integrity of elections around the world.”

The internet, however, is filled with smaller generative-AI companies that may not abide by those same rules, as well as open-source tools that allow people to build their own generative-AI programs.

An FBI spokesperson declined to comment on a hypothetical situation, but said the bureau’s Foreign Influence Task Force remains the federal lead “for identifying, investigating, and disrupting foreign malign influence operations targeting our democratic institutions and values inside the United States.”

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said it’s working closely with state and local agencies to protect the country’s elections.

“CISA is proud to continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with state and local election officials as they defend our elections process against the range of cyber, physical, and operational security risks, to include the risk of foreign influence operations,” said senior adviser Cait Conley.

For many of those in the room for the exercise, the scenarios drove home the need to develop an ambitious public education campaign to help voters recognize deepfakes and to inoculate Americans from the coming onslaught of foreign and domestic disinformation.

The Future US and other groups are now holding talks with Hollywood writers and producers to develop a series of public service videos to help raise awareness about phony video and audio clips during the election campaign, according to Evan Burfield, chief strategy officer for The Future US.

But if public education campaigns and other efforts fail to contain the contagion of disinformation and potential violence, the country could face an unprecedented deadlock over who won the election.

If enough doubts are raised about what has transpired during the election, there’s a danger that the outcome of the vote becomes a “stalemate” with no clear winner, said Danny Crichton of Lux Capital, a venture capital firm focused on emerging technologies, which co-hosted the exercise.

If enough things “go wrong or people are stuck at the polls, then you just get to a draw,” Crichton said. “And to me that is the worst-case scenario. ... I don’t think our system is robust enough to handle that.”
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
That is what must of happened in 2020. Joe won fair and square and there was no wholesale ballot dumping, stuffing or the same set of ballots run through the counter a half dozen times, etc.

Regardless, we are in an extremely precarious place right now. About the last part of government people still had faith in was the electoral process. Even if you didn’t agree with the outcome you had assurances that the integrity of the elections were still intact. That is gone too now. Even if we have an election this fall both sides will have a lot of evidence that the other side cheated and half the country or more will reject the results.

We will become ungovernable.
 

Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I believe this whole article was written to inject this into the reader's mind; "The once close cooperation among federal officials, tech companies and researchers that developed after the 2016 election has unraveled due to sustained Republican attacks in Congress and court rulings discouraging federal agencies from consulting with companies about moderating online content."

The author wants you all to believe that it was all unicorns and skittles when tech, .gov, and social media were holding hands and playing with each other. Moderate what was being said? Well, maybe a little, but it was and still is justified. At least according to schmucks like those who work at NBC, the organization that ran this little propaganda article.

Now that the nasty old (republicans/conservatives/other people/ what ever) came along and broke up the party of suppressing free speech, all manner of really really bad things can, and probably will, happen. The left will see to that just like they've seen to all the other chaos that's been dumped on us since at least Obungo and his prancing veep Joe came along.

Anyhow, that's what propaganda looks like. I have to admit I read the OP with a bit of wonder and respect. These bastards are really good at what they do. This article will most likely suck in 70% or more of those who read it. Actually all they need is a critical mass to believe it. Good luck.

We're in deep do-do.
 

Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
ALL video-generating AI really has to carry some kind of mandatory watermark so EVERYONE knows....
Don't worry. I have it on good authority that they're thinking of forming a committee to discuss just this potential solution. There's going to be a report by next year or so. Probably. Well, maybe.
In the meantime, they want to go back to "moderating" content. (if ya catch my drift) ;)
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Of course Cow Hampshire was subject to "robo-calls" in which a very realistic "Joe Biden" urged voters NOT to vote.

This during the "Primary Day" which Democrat Cow Hampshire decided to step aside as the "first in the nation" primary and let South Carolina take the lead "in diversity" (different more melanin enhanced population in SC.)


Concord, NH – Attorney General John M. Formella announces that the Attorney General’s Office Election Law Unit has identified the source of the January 21, 2024, robocalls received by numerous New Hampshire residents, which played a message with what appeared to be an AI-generated voice clone of President Biden’s voice, and which encouraged recipients not to vote in the January 23, 2024, New Hampshire Presidential Primary Election.

Not mentioned was the fact that Joe Biden was not even on the ballot (although he won as a "write-in" with 63.8 percent of the ballots showing him) It would not have mattered as NONE of the votes were transferred to Biden's total required for DNC threshold.

Well, at least SOMEONE is watching - for what good it was worth.

And as it stands, NH Democratic Voters have NO say on the potential DNC candidate - which is not strictly true - but could be.

Dobbin
 
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CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Don't worry. I have it on good authority that they're thinking of forming a committee to discuss just this potential solution. There's going to be a report by next year or so. Probably. Well, maybe.
In the meantime, they want to go back to "moderating" content. (if ya catch my drift) ;)
The solution will be: We'll do better next time.

My solution: Get up, get dressed and go vote. If you are living in an area where gangs at polling stations might be a problem you are probably living in an area where gangs are a problem at Walgreens and you should either be use to it, or protected from it.

Get up, get dressed, go vote.
 

bbbuddy

DEPLORABLE ME
Not mentioned was the fact that Joe Biden was not even on the ballot (although he won as a "write-in" with 63.8 percent of the ballots showing him) It would not have mattered as NONE of the votes were transferred to Biden's total required for DNC threshold.
Had anybody done a handwriting match for this, or a poll asking dem voters if they wrote in Joe?
Cuz I have SERIOUS DOUBTS that happened!

Heck, how many dem voters can write, lol...

Getting people to write in? 63.8% ? Nah, I don't believe it.
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Unlike a natural disaster, in which government agencies work through a central command, America’s decentralized electoral system is entering uncharted territory without a clear sense of who’s in charge, said Nick Penniman, CEO of Issue One, a bipartisan organization promoting political reform and election integrity.

snip

The once close cooperation among federal officials, tech companies and researchers that developed after the 2016 election has unraveled due to sustained Republican attacks in Congress and court rulings discouraging federal agencies from consulting with companies about moderating online content.

There it is .... we need central (federal control) of the election process.
 
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Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Getting people to write in? 63.8% ? Nah, I don't believe it.

NH Democratic Primary (such as it was) 123,996 total ballot. Joe was written in on 79,100 63.9% .

NH Republican Primary 324,575 total ballots. Trump took 176,391 54.3% (Haley took 140,491 43.3%)

Trump "won" the Primary, but didn't exactly "sweep" the primary. However it showed Haley's "weakness" among the MAGA crowd, and outlined her Democratic strength in a cross-vote primary possibility.

The local RINO (Including Sununu and his establishment House) tried but couldn't hold Trump back.


Opponents of the open primary believe that the open primary leaves the party nominations vulnerable to manipulation and dilution. First, one party could organize its voters to vote in the other party's primary and choose the candidate that they most agree with or that they think their party could most easily defeat. Secondly, in the open primary, independent voters can vote in either party. This occurrence may dilute the vote of a particular party and lead to a nominee who does not represent the party's views.

It did take South Carolina to stick a fork in Haley.

Dobbin
 
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Mark D

Now running for Emperor.
Dominion Voting Systems? CHECK

Utterly corrupt inner city Election workers? CHECK

Bought-and-paid-for DA's and AG's? CHECK

Totally biased Media that will push the "Most honest and secure election EVAR!" narrative? CHECK

... Old Joe won't even need to campaign (again). Heck, he probably already has ninety million votes!
 
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20Gauge

TB Fanatic
That is what must of happened in 2020. Joe won fair and square and there was no wholesale ballot dumping, stuffing or the same set of ballots run through the counter a half dozen times, etc.

Regardless, we are in an extremely precarious place right now. About the last part of government people still had faith in was the electoral process. Even if you didn’t agree with the outcome you had assurances that the integrity of the elections were still intact. That is gone too now. Even if we have an election this fall both sides will have a lot of evidence that the other side cheated and half the country or more will reject the results.

We will become ungovernable.
You are 110% correct in this.

The ungovernable part will only get worse if Trump wins as they will do everything and anything to slow him down and take back the Presidency. Once that happens, this cycle or the next, we are no longer a nation.
 

Jeff B.

Don’t let the Piss Ants get you down…
Of course Cow Hampshire was subject to "robo-calls" in which a very realistic "Joe Biden" urged voters NOT to vote.

This during the "Primary Day" which Democrat Cow Hampshire decided to step aside as the "first in the nation" primary and let South Carolina take the lead "in diversity" (different more melanin enhanced population in SC.)




Not mentioned was the fact that Joe Biden was not even on the ballot (although he won as a "write-in" with 63.8 percent of the ballots showing him) It would not have mattered as NONE of the votes were transferred to Biden's total required for DNC threshold.

Well, at least SOMEONE is watching - for what good it was worth.

And as it stands, NH Democratic Voters have NO say on the potential DNC candidate - which is not strictly true - but could be.

Dobbin
Alternately yelling and whispering?
 

Henry Bowman

Veteran Member
TINVOWOOT.

Wetting ones pants in a dark suit gives one a nice warm feeling but nobody notices and in the end you just wet your pants...once the warm feeling goes away you realize you are screwed.

Just like voting.
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Dominion Voting Systems? CHECK

Utterly corrupt inner city Election workers? CHECK

Bought-and-paid-for DA's and AG's? CHECK

Totally biased Media that will push the "Most honest and secure election EVAR!" narrative? CHECK

... Old Joe won't even need to campaign (again). Heck, he probably already has ninety million votes!

Probably as many as needed, whatever that number may be.
 

tnphil

Don't screw with an engineer
You are 110% correct in this.

The ungovernable part will only get worse if Trump wins as they will do everything and anything to slow him down and take back the Presidency. Once that happens, this cycle or the next, we are no longer a nation.
We are no longer a nation now.
Half(ish) hates the other half. Depends on the numbers you can believe.
We have no borders.
Seemingly half the country is eat up with woke bullshit. The "majority" race is castigated and demonized, cowers in fear and wets their pants over DEI crap.
The "government", alphabet agencies, courts, Congress have no desire to uphold laws and actively flaunt the same with lawfare.
 

ssbn642blue

Veteran Member
At least the DS is giving us a 'heads-up' on what they're going to try. Militia or BLM, I'm headed to my voting precinct.

See deep-fake videos at link!


Experts war-gamed what might happen if deepfakes disrupt the 2024 election. Things went sideways fast.​


March 16, 2024, 6:00 AM CDT
By Dan De Luce and Kevin Collier

It’s Election Day in Arizona and elderly voters in Maricopa County are told by phone that local polling places are closed due to threats from militia groups.

Meanwhile, in Miami, a flurry of photos and videos on social media show poll workers dumping ballots.

The phone calls in Arizona and the videos in Florida turn out to be “deepfakes” created with artificial intelligence tools. But by the time local and federal authorities figure out what they are dealing with, the false information has gone viral across the country.

This simulated scenario was part of a recent exercise in New York that gathered dozens of former senior U.S. and state officials, civil society leaders and executives from technology companies to rehearse for the 2024 election.

The results were sobering.

“It was jarring for folks in the room to see how quickly just a handful of these types of threats could spiral out of control and really dominate the election cycle,” said Miles Taylor, a former senior Department of Homeland Security official who helped organize the exercise for the Washington-based nonprofit The Future US.

Dubbed “The Deepfake Dilemma,” the exercise illustrated how AI-enabled tools threaten to turbocharge the spread of false information in an already polarized society and could sow chaos in the 2024 election, multiple participants told NBC News. Rather than examining a singular attack by a group or hostile regime, the exercise explored a scenario with an array of both domestic and foreign actors launching disinformation, exploiting rumors and seizing on political divisions.

The organizers and participants in the war game spoke exclusively to NBC News about how it played out.

They said it raised worrisome questions about whether federal and local officials — and the tech industry — are prepared to counter both foreign and domestic disinformation designed to undermine public confidence in the election results.

Current U.S. officials say privately they share those concerns and that some state and local election agencies will be hard-pressed to keep the election process on track.

The exercise illustrated the uncertainty surrounding the roles of federal and state agencies and tech firms seven months before what is expected to be one of the most divisive elections in U.S. history. Does the federal government have the ability to detect an AI deepfake? Should the White House or a state election office publicly declare that a particular report is false?

Unlike a natural disaster, in which government agencies work through a central command, America’s decentralized electoral system is entering uncharted territory without a clear sense of who’s in charge, said Nick Penniman, CEO of Issue One, a bipartisan organization promoting political reform and election integrity.

“Now, in the last few years, we in America are having to defend assaults on our elections from both domestic and foreign forces. We just don’t have the infrastructure or the history to do it at scale because we’ve never had to face threats this severe in the past,” said Penniman, who took part in the exercise.

“We know a hurricane is eventually going to hit our elections,” said Penniman. But in the exercise, “because patterns of working together haven’t formed, few people understood exactly how they should be coordinating with others or not.”

In a mock “White House Situation Room” around a long table, participants played assigned roles — including as directors of the FBI, CIA and the Department of Homeland Security — and sifted through the alarming reports from Arizona and Florida and numerous other unconfirmed threats, including a break-in at a postal processing center for mail-in ballots.

Conferring with the tech companies, players who were “government officials” struggled to determine the facts, who was spreading “deepfakes” and how government agencies should respond. (MSNBC anchor Alex Witt also took part in the exercise, playing the role of president of the National Association of Broadcasters.)

In the exercise, it was unclear initially that photos and video of poll workers tossing out ballots in Miami were fake. The images had gone viral, partly because of a bot-texting campaign by Russia. :rolleyes: [I'm so sick of 'Muh Russia as the DS's 'fall guy' when Putin has come out and said he'd prefer Biden as POTUS because he's more predictable].

Eventually, officials were able to establish that the whole episode was staged and then enhanced by artificial intelligence to make it look more convincing.

In this and other cases, including the fake calls to Arizona voters, the players hesitated over who should make a public announcement telling voters their polling places were safe and their ballots secure. Federal officials worried that any public statement would be seen as an attempt to boost the chances of President Joe Biden’s re-election.

“There was also a lot of debate and uncertainty about whether the White House and the president should engage,” Taylor said.

“One of the big debates in the room was whose job is it to say if something’s real or fake,” he said. “Is it the state-level election officials who say we’ve determined that there’s a fake? Is it private companies? Is it the White House?”

Said Taylor, “That’s something that we think we’re also going to see in this election cycle.”

And although the war game imagined tech executives in the room with federal officials, in reality, communication between the federal government and private firms on how to counter foreign propaganda and disinformation has sharply diminished in recent years.

The once close cooperation among federal officials, tech companies and researchers that developed after the 2016 election has unraveled due to sustained Republican attacks in Congress and court rulings discouraging federal agencies from consulting with companies about moderating online content.

The result is a potentially risky gap in safeguarding the 2024 election.

State governments lack the resources to detect an AI deepfake or to counter it quickly with accurate information, and now technology companies and some federal agencies are wary of taking a leading role, former officials and experts said.

“Everybody’s terrified of the lawsuits and ... accusations of free speech suppression,” said Kathy Boockvar, former Pennsylvania secretary of state, who took part in the exercise.

The New York war game, plus similar sessions being carried out in other states, is part of a wider effort to try to encourage more communication between tech executives and government officials, said Taylor.

But in the world outside the war game, social media platforms have cut back teams that moderate false election content, and there’s no sign those companies are ready to pursue close cooperation with government.

State and local election offices, meanwhile, face a significant shortage of experienced staff. A wave of physical and cyber threats has triggered a record exodus of election workers, leaving election agencies ill-prepared for November.

Concerned about understaffed and inexperienced state election agencies, a coalition of nonprofits and good-government groups are planning to organize a bipartisan, countrywide network of former officials, technology specialists and others to help local authorities detect deepfakes in real time and respond with accurate information.

“We’re going to have to do the best we can — independent of the federal government and the social media platforms — to try to fill the gap,” said Penniman, whose organization is involved in the election security effort.

Boockvar, the former secretary of state, said she hopes nonprofits can act as a bridge between the tech companies and the federal government, helping to maintain communication channels.

Some of the largest AI tech firms say they are introducing safeguards to their products and communicating with government officials to help bolster election security before the November vote.

“Ahead of the upcoming elections, OpenAI has put in place policies to prevent abuse, launched new features to increase transparency around AI-generated content, and developed partnerships to connect people to authoritative sources of voting information,” said a spokesperson. “We continue to work alongside governments, industry partners, and civil society toward our shared goal of protecting the integrity of elections around the world.”

The internet, however, is filled with smaller generative-AI companies that may not abide by those same rules, as well as open-source tools that allow people to build their own generative-AI programs.

An FBI spokesperson declined to comment on a hypothetical situation, but said the bureau’s Foreign Influence Task Force remains the federal lead “for identifying, investigating, and disrupting foreign malign influence operations targeting our democratic institutions and values inside the United States.”

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said it’s working closely with state and local agencies to protect the country’s elections.

“CISA is proud to continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with state and local election officials as they defend our elections process against the range of cyber, physical, and operational security risks, to include the risk of foreign influence operations,” said senior adviser Cait Conley.

For many of those in the room for the exercise, the scenarios drove home the need to develop an ambitious public education campaign to help voters recognize deepfakes and to inoculate Americans from the coming onslaught of foreign and domestic disinformation.

The Future US and other groups are now holding talks with Hollywood writers and producers to develop a series of public service videos to help raise awareness about phony video and audio clips during the election campaign, according to Evan Burfield, chief strategy officer for The Future US.

But if public education campaigns and other efforts fail to contain the contagion of disinformation and potential violence, the country could face an unprecedented deadlock over who won the election.

If enough doubts are raised about what has transpired during the election, there’s a danger that the outcome of the vote becomes a “stalemate” with no clear winner, said Danny Crichton of Lux Capital, a venture capital firm focused on emerging technologies, which co-hosted the exercise.

If enough things “go wrong or people are stuck at the polls, then you just get to a draw,” Crichton said. “And to me that is the worst-case scenario. ... I don’t think our system is robust enough to handle that.”
i call total BS on this article...
 

Tigerlily

Senior Member
The purpose of this war-gamed scenario is to point to, in November, after thousands of videos show up showing workers dumping ballots. Deep fakes! Will be the explanation. Same with any evidence of BLM being threatening, and scaring away voters in conservative precincts. That's their plan.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
These people need a real job.
They are OVERTHINKING IT!
The cops will respond to any
ACTUAL trouble at the few polls
That açtualy get attacked.
Having two ARMED, (AR 15) off/on duty cops or
national guardsmen at polls is do-able.
They are too worried about CONTROLLING
PUBLIC. PERCEPTION and opinion!
 
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Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Dominion Voting Systems? CHECK

Utterly corrupt inner city Election workers? CHECK

Bought-and-paid-for DA's and AG's? CHECK

Totally biased Media that will push the "Most honest and secure election EVAR!" narrative? CHECK

... Old Joe won't even need to campaign (again). Heck, he probably already has ninety million votes!

And yet despite this Trump is still running.

Either he has no idea this is happening, or he doesn't care that it is.

Which, I ask again, is it?
 
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