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Were Russian Hackers Deterred From Interfering In America's Election? (omaha.com)

"Despite probing and trolling, a Russian cyberattack is the dog that did not bark in Tuesday's midterm elections," writes national security columnist Eli Lake. This is the assessment of the Department of Homeland Security, which says there were no signs of a coordinated campaign to disrupt U.S. voting. This welcome news raises a relevant and important question: Were cyber adversaries actually deterred from infiltrating voter databases and changing election results...?

In September the White House unveiled a new policy aimed at deterring Russia, China, Iran and North Korea from hacking U.S. computer networks in general and the midterms in particular. National security adviser John Bolton acknowledged as much last week when he said the U.S. government was undertaking "offensive cyber operations" aimed at "defending the integrity of our electoral process." There aren't many details. Reportedly this entailed sending texts, pop-ups, emails and direct messages warning Russian trolls and military hackers not to disrupt the midterms. U.S. officials tell me much more is going on that remains classified. It is part of a new approach from the Trump administration that purports to unleash U.S. Cyber Command to hack the hackers back, to fight them in their networks as opposed to America's.

Bolton has said the policy reverses previous restrictions on military hackers to disrupt the networks from which rival powers attack the U.S. Sometimes this is called "persistent engagement" or "defend forward." And it represents a shift in the broader U.S. approach to engaging adversaries in cyberspace.... The difference now is that America's cyber warriors will routinely try to disrupt cyberattacks before they begin... The object of cyberdeterrence is not to get an adversary to never use cyberweapons. It's to prevent attacks of certain critical systems such as voter registration databases, electrical grids and missile command-and-control systems. The theory, at least, is to force adversaries to devote resources they would otherwise use to attack the U.S. to better secure their own networks.

Jason Healey, a historian of cyber conflicts at Columbia University's School for International and Public Affairs, asks "How much of cyberspace will survive the war?" warning that "persistent engagement" could lead to a dangerous miscalculation by an adversarial nation-state -- or even worse, a spiral of escalation, with other state's following America's lead, changing the open Internet into more of a battleground.

7 of 240 comments (clear)

  1. No need this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Dims had it all:
    - Fake news collusion
    - Ballot stuffing
    - Illegal votes

  2. We are so sick of the Russian boogeyman. by AbRASiON · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The far left and the media have been beating this drum for multiple years.

    If one were to take all the claims at face value, you would think that there's Russians in the bloody toaster. They're everywhere! Doing all the bad things, they ran the election, they hacked servers, "they" are every single account on social media that doesn't mean heavily left.

    If you disagree with anything, you're not real, probably a Russian bot! Or a Nazi, clearly!

    They wonder why people are voting differently to how they actually poll publically...
    As an ex far lefty, they're getting downright embarrassing.

    Posting from Moscow,.... Obviously.

    1. Re:We are so sick of the Russian boogeyman. by reboot246 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Indeed. You'd think the American left would have much more in common with the former Communists in Russia than anybody on the right.

      The Democrats didn't really need any Russian help this time. They're quite capable of stealing elections all by themselves, as we are witnessing right now in Florida. Oh, look we just "found" some more ballots in the supply closet! And here are some more in the trunk of this car!

    2. Re:We are so sick of the Russian boogeyman. by Dorianny · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is the GOP really so incompetent that they would have elections stolen in a State they control the Governor's office the Secretary of State and Florida’s Chief Election Officer posts? Maybe they should invite Putin to come lead the GOP directly

    3. Re:We are so sick of the Russian boogeyman. by Z80a · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's the beauty, they glue to the democrats like weird headcrabs and then go to the streets and do all sorts of vandalism, violence and general thuggery, and this paint the dems with a bad picture, and those can't disavow the antifa because it will call em nazis until they yield.

  3. No proof by manu0601 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First we are said without proof that Russians made the 2016 presidential elections. Then we are told without proof that they were stopped from influencing the 2018 midterm elections.

    Alternative explanation: Russians try to influence all US elections with negligible impact, and democrats lost in 2016 because they chose the wrong candidate.

  4. Re:Motivation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually Kennedy did when he deployed missiles to turkey and they retaliated with cuban missiles, but lets not let facts stand in the way of politics.