Experts Report: How Disinformation Impacts an Election

Assistant Professor of Information Technology and Management Maurice Dawson: The role that disinformation plays in campaigns as it relates to cybersecurity is to create confusion. Itās pretty significant. It is a form of active measure, psychological warfare, and it gets individuals to change your decisions, which could ultimately allow a nefarious actor or a nation-state to help the person they want.
The way that disinformation campaigns can be effectively countered is to actually present the truth, fact finding. When you think about what Twitter did in terms of saying, āHey this is fact,ā of a particular statement that was presented. This is the same thing that needs to be done, and in a continuous basis, because thereās so much information is being presented to people every day and individuals will not look at this stuff on their own. They will not research this. In the states, what weāve done is weāve passed legislation against robocalls, the use of AI. And this is big because you could actually manipulate voters, saying, āHey, this particular senator or legislator says this,ā and itās not them. Itās actually a speech that was created by someone else to say a message that is harmful to them, and so that really creates disinformation as well, but this is more legitimate because now youāre hearing a particular voice. Theyāre calling you. Theyāre leaving a message and youāre saying maybe this isnāt the person I want to vote for.
Limiting to the use of these, especially in an election cycle, is important because this would allow for voters who are unfamiliar with these technologies and their capabilities to not be exposed to them.