Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Security Politics

Bipartisan Senate Report Calls For Sweeping Effort To Prevent Russian Interference in 2020 Election (washingtonpost.com) 330

A bipartisan panel of U.S. senators Tuesday called for sweeping action by Congress, the White House and Silicon Valley to ensure social media sites aren't used to interfere in the coming presidential election, delivering a sobering assessment about the weaknesses that Russian operatives exploited in the 2016 campaign. From a report: The Senate Intelligence Committee, a Republican-led panel that has been investigating foreign electoral interference for more than two and a half years, said in blunt language that Russians worked to damage Democrat Hillary Clinton while bolstering Republican Donald Trump -- and made clear that fresh rounds of interference are likely ahead of the 2020 vote. "Russia is waging an information warfare campaign against the U.S. that didn't start and didn't end with the 2016 election," said Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), the committee's chairman. "Their goal is broader: to sow societal discord and erode public confidence in the machinery of government. By flooding social media with false reports, conspiracy theories, and trolls, and by exploiting existing divisions, Russia is trying to breed distrust of our democratic institutions and our fellow Americans." Though the 85-page report itself had extensive redactions, in the visible sections lawmakers urged their peers in Congress to act, including through the potential adoption of new regulations that would make who bought an ad more transparent. The report also called on the White House and the executive branch to adopt a more forceful, public role, warning Americans about the ways in which dangerous misinformation can spread while creating new teams within the U.S. government to monitor for threats and share intelligence with industry.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Bipartisan Senate Report Calls For Sweeping Effort To Prevent Russian Interference in 2020 Election

Comments Filter:
  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @02:25PM (#59284802)

    Yeah I'm sure Trump is going to be all for this.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by diesel66 ( 254283 )

      If it involves voter ID, he absolutely would. Most other countries have some form of voter ID, and we should too. The only reason to be against voter ID, is the intent to screw with the election process.

      • Re:Bipartisan, huh. (Score:5, Informative)

        by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @02:57PM (#59284974)

        Actually the problem with Voter ID, is that it screws with the election process by excluding people who are unable to get a drivers license, or in general unable to get past the bureaucracy needed to get it.

        Like all things it is about implementation. If the Voter ID worked like the Census and made sure people who are able to vote get the ID with enough time to use it. But most proposed implementations of Voter ID is actually targeted to make it difficult for minority groups and people who are poor to obtain it, thus mess with the free election process by finding a way to exclude citizens from voting, or make it difficult enough to many to choose not to vote.

        There hasn't been any reports of major voting problems where non-citizens are voting. As the current voter registration process (I have experience in NY State), at least has you go state your name and sign next to your name. If people were going and abusing the system, I expect you would see a lot of people complaining that someone already signed their name.

        Voter ID is a good idea. However it needs to be thoughtfully and fairly implemented so all voters can use it.

        • Oh please. Who is unable to get an ID? How are they able to function in modern society without an ID?

          • I currently don't have an 8-hour business day to waste at the DMV to get a valid ID. I haven't owned or needed a car since 2012 and when I do need a picture ID I use my old college ID card. I work as a contractor which means I don't get paid time off. If I had to get a state ID to vote it'd make it several times more difficult for me to vote.

            The one thing I can't do with a school ID is buy beer, but since my liver is failing that's less of a bug and more of a feature.
            • I guess you also never rented a car (or much of anything else), never opened a bank account, never cashed a check, don't have any credit cards, never boarded an airplane...

              An old college ID card is going to be one hell of a stretch (interestingly enough though, it does work as a form of ID for the I-9 form...)

            • Wait - an ID card costs around $50 or so in a coastal state, and lasts for like 7-10 years, depending, with renewal costing far less. $50 is barely more than an average monthly bill for a cheap smartphone plan, and far less expensive than a new outfit. Pretty sure that unless you're homeless and jobless, it's not going to be that big and nasty of an imposition. Considering that you need one to get into a club/bar, buy certain adult products, get a bank account, a credit card, purchase a firearm, get a job..

              • The kicker is, many states subsidize ID cards if you are impoverished (many giving them to you for free!)

                If they make it easy to get the card, and give it to you for free, and also give you copies of any documents you need to get it for free, then you can have Voter ID without unfair discrimination against the poor. Do any states do all of that?

              • The kicker is, many states subsidize ID cards if you are impoverished (many giving them to you for free!)

                They subsidize the card. They do not subsidize the documentation required to get a card.

                If I need a new certified copy of my birth certificate I have the option of showing up in-person for a free copy, or I have to pay $50 to get a copy through the mail. I live about 2500 miles from the county registrar's office, so "show up in person" isn't exactly a free option.

          • I bet it has to be a valid ID. If your license gets suspended you might have an ID but it wouldn't be valid. It is quite easy to get your license suspended in the US. I think in a lot of places unpaid parking tickets are enough. Poor voters would probably have this sort of problem more than rich ones. So I would think Democrats would be the ones most against it.

          • by Type44Q ( 1233630 )

            Who is unable to get an ID?

            Those who shouldn't be able to vote??

          • I moved from Colorado to New York, and went to apply for a driver's license. I started with my valid Colorado license, and official copy of my birth certificate (from California), along with some of the proof-of-residency documentation the DMV web site said I needed.

            It took me 9 attempts. Each time the clerk arbitrarily excluded a different set of documents. What was valid on attempt #5 was suddenly invalid on attempt #6.

            Now, I happened to work for a place where "I'm gonna go spend the next 3 hours at th

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          You don't need a driver's license - a state ID card would work. I mean, I guess you can live without that - and have no way of getting a job (State issued ID required for an I-9), or renting anything, or buying alcohol, or traveling on an airplane or train, or...
          • You don't need a driver's license - a state ID card would work.

            True

            I mean, I guess you can live without that

            True, many people do.

            and have no way of getting a job (State issued ID required for an I-9)

            Not true. The list of allowable ID documents for an I-9 is long, and includes things like student ID card, school record or report card, clinic, doctor or hospital record or day-care or nursery school record.

            In addition, not all ways of making a living require filing an I-9, only formal jobs. Informal work and self-employment don't.

            renting anything

            "anything" is a bit too broad, but yeah, lots of people never rent anything.

            buying alcohol

            Not true. You don't need ID to buy alcohol unless you're young. Yes, man

            • Not true. The list of allowable ID documents for an I-9 is long, and includes things like student ID card, school record or report card, clinic, doctor or hospital record or day-care or nursery school record.

              Ahhh, a lie by omission!. Those are only allowed with another, Government issued ID [uscis.gov] confirming who you are. As far as flying, TSA requires you to produce an ID or to provide enough information to confirm your identity [tsa.gov] before passing through security. Meaning you have a Government-issued ID somewhere in the system that the details can be validated.

              • Not true. The list of allowable ID documents for an I-9 is long, and includes things like student ID card, school record or report card, clinic, doctor or hospital record or day-care or nursery school record.

                Ahhh, a lie by omission!. Those are only allowed with another, Government issued ID [uscis.gov] confirming who you are.

                That's not what your link says, OP's list are all list b documents that establish identity and it's stated in big red letters so it should be easy to spot if you'd consider reading it https://www.uscis.gov/i-9-cent... [uscis.gov] (and in the case of I-9 must be used in conjuction with any type c document establishing employment authorization).

        • like Jury duty. When voting is mandatory then you can't do voter suppression. It's kind of hard to suppress something that's required.
      • Re:Bipartisan, huh. (Score:5, Informative)

        by magusxxx ( 751600 ) <magusxxx_2000 AT yahoo DOT com> on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @03:01PM (#59284998)

        The reason we don't have a Voter ID is because of all the stipulations (mainly) Republicans placed on having them. Here's the whole list of them...

        https://www.aclu.org/other/opp... [aclu.org]

        In a nutshell: "A recent study found that, since 2000, there were only 31 credible allegations of voter impersonation – the only type of fraud that photo IDs could prevent – during a period of time in which over 1 billion ballots were cast."

      • by spun ( 1352 )

        Funny how, even with the Republicans looking for vot3r fraud with a fine toothed comb, they have not been able to find much at all. And Identity Theft style fraud is the least common of all. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by jriding ( 1076733 ) on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @03:02PM (#59285008)

      Moscow Mitch already said we are secure enough!

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      Trump is not a party.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Trump is not a party.

        I hate to tell you this, but Trump IS the party, and the party, for all intents and purposes, IS Trump. It's become a cult of personality.

        What brakes or moderating influences have the GOP or the Republicans put on Trump? Zero, zilch, nada, nothing.

        They slavishly support everything he does, although a couple of them may go "tut tut" occasionally. Aside from that, show me anything they've done to actually oppose any of his policies or a time they've prevented him from doing anything.

        Put kids in cages? Sure, n

      • Trump is not a party.

        When the republicans in congress stop lining up to suck Trump's cock, maybe we'll buy that shit. Not now.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @02:29PM (#59284824) Journal

    According to the president, there's absolutely nothing wrong with a foreign agent doing something that might help one particular candidate succeed in the next election.

    So it seems that unless and until the current president faces some sort of consequence for openly asking for such from the Ukraine, it seems pretty pointless to be doing anything else about it, because the president has basically explicitly sanctioned it.

    • Because China is getting into the game. And they are going to want to push for someone other than Trump.

      When there is a problem what goes unopposed without repercussions even if it benefits you, chances are the other side will use those underhanded tactics against you too.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by bobbied ( 2522392 )

      According to the president, there's absolutely nothing wrong with a foreign agent doing something that might help one particular candidate succeed in the next election.

      So it seems that unless and until the current president faces some sort of consequence for openly asking for such from the Ukraine, it seems pretty pointless to be doing anything else about it, because the president has basically explicitly sanctioned it.

      If you want to make this argument, beware of unintended consequences. There is a whole raft of democrats who did what you are claiming Trump did, only we have PROOF of it. It's been in the news, covered by reporters and even involved Ukraine. Your effort to bring down Trump *will* bring multiple democrats along for the ride, Schiff chief among them if you press this too far.

      Read the transcript of the call in question. I dare you. Show me where Trump is doing what you think he did. https://www.politico. [politico.com]

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        There are numerous documents at this time that show or corroborate what he said, and in fact he even publicly admitted to doing it on national television.

        The point is that Trump doesn't see anything wrong with asking a foreign entity to do something that could help him win the election when it conveniently happens to be something that otherwise would be perfectly legal. However well intentioned, that he is asking for assistance in an investigation into corruption of the Bidens is irrelevant. It is stil

        • Admitted to doing what exactly? What are you alleging here? Using foreign sources of information as opposition research?

          READ the transcript. What you are thinking is there, isn't. Trump has not admitted to doing what you claim in any appearance I've seen. He HAS claimed to be doing his job, in perusing criminal investigations in honor of international law and a specific treaty with Ukraine and looking into the 2016 election interference and past corrupt behavior within Ukraine. Nothing at all wrong or i

  • He's the source of most of the misinformation these days.

    He latches onto whatever conspiracy theory that seems to point to him not being guilty of treason.

    Acting to aid Russia is Treason, if you're having problems following that.

    This latest BackStab of our allies against ISIS is the most recent obvious; no one benefits from this but America's Enemies.

    Asking for dirt on Biden from foreign countries is just the topping on the Treason Cake.

    This will get worse before it gets better; wait until he starts telling

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @02:48PM (#59284912) Journal

    Perhaps I'm missing something, but if the Senate, controlled by Republicans, agrees with this report that Russia is still interfering in our elections, why would they be so dismissive of an investigation into why our so-called president was asking Russia to commit espionage against a U.S. citizen, or why he was so hellbent on obstructing other aspects of the investigation?

    Shouldn't they have been curious why this was so and why there was obstruction? Shouldn't the facts, as they like to say, be known and based on those facts a determination made? Why have Republicans been determined to prevent any attempt at examining the crimes committed?

    Further, if they agree Russia is still interfering, why have they refused, until recently, to even contemplate strengthening security of our voting machines through such simple acts as having a verifiable paper trail?

    Too many questions, not enough answers. One has to wonder whose side Republicans are on if they keep defending crimes they way they have been.

    • None of the "interference" mentioned has anything at all to do with actual voting or the machines. I do support all measures to tighten that up via cleaning up the voter rolls, ID, etc. You?

    • Perhaps I'm missing something, but if the Senate, controlled by Republicans, agrees with this report that Russia is still interfering in our elections, why would they be so dismissive of an investigation into why our so-called president was asking Russia to commit espionage against a U.S. citizen, or why he was so hellbent on obstructing other aspects of the investigation?

      Because... politics.

      Anything that Democrats try to do is automatically bad according to Republicans.
      Anything that Republicans try to do is automatically bad according to Democrats.

      I hate the party system where candidates express loyalty to their party rather than their country, or following their own conscience. Washington was against political parties- and he was right!

    • By admitting there's a problem they're giving legitimacy to their panel. And by doing so they can slowly twist the narrative to fit whatever they want.

    • It's called Theater. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Grog6 ( 85859 ) on Tuesday October 08, 2019 @03:11PM (#59285048)

      Look like you're doing something, while continuing to Obfusticate, Deny, Deflect, Gaslight, and provide Whataboutism.

      If it weren't theater, someone would notice that Trump's kids are doing everything they are accusing Biden's son of, in a much shadier manner.

    • Perhaps I'm missing something, but if the Senate, controlled by Republicans, agrees with this report that Russia is still interfering in our elections, why would they be so dismissive of an investigation into why our so-called president was asking Russia to commit espionage against a U.S. citizen, or why he was so hellbent on obstructing other aspects of the investigation?

      They know Trump is working for Putin, and what traitors they will look like when that comes out.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      The so-called Republicans remember what happened after Nixon went down and they are terrified. Trump may go down much harder. If Nixon exploded, Trump may have the potential to completely implode. Create a black hole and suck the GOP down with him?

      If Trump has nothing to hide, then what's with hiding his tax returns and most recently with the discovery that he's been hiding "diplomatic discussions" on the codeword server? Actually, in terms of hiding stuff, it's just et cetera, et cetera.

      • I don't think Trump face any real consequences for his crimes. Even Nixon was pardoned, and Ford spent the rest of his life defending that decision.
        If the criminal Reagan was never prosecuted, despite all the laws he broke, I can't see Trump ever seeing the inside of a court.
  • "Russia is trying to breed distrust of our democratic institutions and our fellow Americans"

    That's the Republicans and Democrats job! Damn Russians, stealing hard(ly) working American jobs!

  • Seems damn simple to me. People just need to be less stupid. Our parties have enjoyed being able to sway large subsets of stupid people for decades. Now the problem seems to be that somebody else did a better job.

    So-And-So advocates compulsory sterilization of white people. -Random fb post

    So-And-So advocates compulsory sterilization of white people. -I'm candidate sleazebag, and I approve this message.

    Pretty specific and simple fix.

  • They should come up with a law or other amazing sweeping reform that makes it a crime for individual citizens to be stupid. If I tried my hardest to convince you that the sky was green and you end up believing that the sky was green then the problem is with you. Sure I am a real sleaze for lying, but at the heart of the matter is that the sky is blue.

    • If I tried my hardest to convince you that the sky was green and you end up believing that the sky was green then the problem is with you. Sure I am a real sleaze for lying, but at the heart of the matter is that the sky is blue.

      I'm colour blind you insensitive clod!

  • If this site had the subscriber base it used to, it might be a sufficiently relevant "social networking site" that this law would be relevant to it. Since this site has instead been in decay for over a decade now, maybe it could instead be a useful honey pot for the Russian troll farms?
  • Given the discord and divisiveness the Left and Right wings of the Republicratic Party has sown, I'm not particularly worried about whatever minor effect the Russians may create.

    Whichever side wins, the average American citizen loses, as usual.

  • to ensure social media sites aren't used to interfere in the coming presidential election,

    Surely this means social media sites will be shut down!

    . . . . . .sadly the truth is disappointing.

Whoever dies with the most toys wins.

Working...