Do your current managed services really help run your operations or are they ...
Running isn't enough anymore. With PWC's managed services, your operations don't just run, they evolve continuously,
powered by AI embedded directly into your workflows. So instead of maintaining yesterday's model, you're building tomorrow's advantage. PWC's managed services, we run your operations with tech and talent, so you can run faster, scale smarter, lead stronger.
βHi, the pole here. My name is Kodzef Rage. Why is here suddenly a crypto expert?β
Every time my opinion, a salesman for sure was also a venture coin, as next is to stick to it. You could use all your exciting points, then crypto is simply a bit of a business. Over-sister app, hundreds of coins to trade, and even sell it, because it's a bit of a business, or a small app store. I'm Sarah Librik, intern at Wallfair with an episode from the Law for Archive for July 12, 2026. On June 7th, the Department of Justice sent letters to senior election officials in every state and the District of Columbia,
threatening legal consequences for allowing non-citizens to remain on voter rolls. The same week, New Counterterrorism grants from the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
βrequired states to verify the citizenship of registered voters, or they would not receive the full grant amount.β
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has proposed a 770 million dollar cut in its fiscal year 2027 budget request
for the cyber security and infrastructure security agency, or Sissa, the agency historically responsible for election security. For today's Archive, a chosen episode from October 30, 2024, in which Quentin Dressett and O'Hemiah Law Street spoke with Kate Conway, senior advisor to the director of Sissa, about security efforts the agency was taking ahead of the 2024 election. They discussed protecting the election workers and election systems, identifying foreign influence campaigns and more. It's the Lawfair podcast.
I'm Quentin Dressett, senior editor of Lawfair. And together with my fellow senior editor, O'Hemiah Law Street, I sat down with Kate Conway, senior advisor to the director at the cyber security and infrastructure security agency. Also known as Sissa. Our adversaries may absolutely try to leverage narratives that will lead to violence.
We've already seen how threats and violence targeting election officials manifested after 2020 and continue to. We have to be better than that. We have to say this is not who we are as a nation, not in America. Today we're talking about how Sissa has been working to protect election security as the clock ticks down until election day. So we're talking to you almost exactly a week out from election day 2024.
How does Sissa understand the landscape right now?
βWhat are things looking like from your perspective?β
Thanks so much. And yeah, the Sissa has certainly blown by and a large part of that is due to the amount of work that we have been doing as Sissa with the election stakeholder community. And just for some folks who may not be as familiar with who Sissa is or the role we play. So after Russian attempts to interfere with influence the 2016 presidential election.
In January of 2017 the Department of Homeland Security designated election infrastructure as a sub-sector of critical infrastructure.
And thus brought with it additional federal resourcing and support to this sector. And with that Sissa, the cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency within DHS, was designated as the federal government lead to work with the election infrastructure community. So that's state and local election officials as well as election vendors to help ensure the security and resilience of our democratic institutions and specifically our election infrastructure. And for the constitution, you know, states are responsible for administering elections.
The role that we as part of the federal government play are really in support of the efforts, right, enabling those who are on the front lines administering managing securing our democratic process to have the resources and tools that they need to be successful. And I have to tell you it's just someone who's been in this space for the past seven years.
The amount of progress we have seen and investment by the election infrastruc...
The resourcing and time and just tireless efforts that they have committed to really even further strengthening.
But we have to remember in physical security of our election infrastructure and ensuring their preparedness has been both impressive and inspiring to watch and to be part of. And so when we look at the 2024. And what we're seeing for this cycle it is the most complex threat landscape we have seen for an election cycle, but we are also entering in a period of time where our election infrastructure is more secure than it's ever been. And the election community is more prepared than ever.
βAnd that's why we have a lot of confidence going in while certainly not being complacent about the risks we face.β
So, okay, you mentioned that this is a very complex environment that you're facing. And I'm curious if you could maybe tell us a little bit more about what you've seen change, right? Like what is different now than was in 2020, 2016 and how are you, you know, changing your approach in order to face this fractured information environment. Yeah, and so one of the things I start with is when we talk about the complexity of this threat environment. I put it into a few different bins and they all interrelate.
βAnd I think that's why it's really important to understand all of it, right?β
Because this is something that the election security community has to navigate into reality. And I think what we are seeing here to use a more military turn is, you know, interdomain operations across domain operations, where we have malicious actors conducting activities in one domain like cyber.
To enable another activity in a second domain like information. So, using a cyber activity or a cyber event to thus drive or inform an influence operation.
And that influence operation may actually be trying to foster effects in the physical domain. And so you see how all of this is interrelated. And unfortunately, we've seen how this is manifested just this year. So I'll start with the physical side where, you know, largely following unfounded claims that the 2020 election was rigged and did not reflect the will of the American people. We saw a significant uptick in threats both threats of violence and targeted harassment towards election officials of both parties and their families following 2020 over the past several years.
In addition to that, we've seen cyber activity targeting those individuals, whether it's things like doxing or utilizing that type of activity or information to then fuel influence operations targeting these folks. We added an unprecedented scale that has put a tremendous amount of pressure on this community and unfortunately forced, but if you do the partures in the years immediately after 2020. And so this year, we've seen that continued to evolve where the types of physical threats that we're seeing against the election community have manifested as things like swatting attacks at the homes of chief election officials,
putting at risk them their families and first responders. We've seen bomb hoaxes called into government facilities include election offices.
We've also seen hazardous substances like fentanyl sent deliberately to election officials targeting them, looking to disrupt election operations at election offices and intimidate election officials.
βAnd so when we look at the physical threat landscape and what election officials are facing, it's really important to understand that.β
And that's been a big part of what Sissa has done to this cycle is we have increased the number of resources that we've made available to this community to help them with ensuring their physical security and preparedness for these types of incidents, both in election offices and polling locations. But we've done things like conduct physical security assessments of election offices since January 2023, we've conducted nearly 1200 physical security assessments of election facilities in the United States.
We've also done things like exercises where we've rehearsed these scenarios as well as others with election officials and all they would respond. But then let's carry over to the cyber domain. I talked a little bit about how some of the cyber activities like doxing are actually involved in some of the physical threats, but then we have just the routine and more regular or traditional cyber threats themselves.
We continue to see state and local election offices as well as election menor...
And so we have worked extensively with the election community to really raise the bar on their cybersecurity and their preparedness, both in terms of defensive measures, but as well as in terms of resilience.
βAnd so, you know, there's again, meant tremendous investment and progress. Thanks to the prioritization of cybersecurity largely coming out of 2016 by this community and that's at the local state and federal level.β
And so, then we lead into the information domain and really again, what we are seeing this cycle, this scope and scale of foreign to line influence operations targeting our elections is at a greater level than we've seen in any prior cycle. And so, you know, when we talk about who and how the office of the Director of National Intelligence puts out their annual threat assessments and they've said that over the past several cycles we've seen it growing. And more diverse array of foreign actors involved in this space looking to especially influence American elections but also explore interference. You know, what we have really seen this cycle in terms of influence operations by Russia, by Iran, by China has been substantial.
And while the tactics they use have varied the objectives of these influence operations by all actors remain the same and there's two narratives that they are really pushing through every means available. And that is to undermine American public confidence in our democratic institutions and the second is to so partisan discord. And so when you take all of that into reality on top of asking election officials to go out and be experts and election administration, you can see that the weight of what we are asking these folks to take on.
βWhy we do truly say that defending democracy is a team sport and why we assist us as the federal government leader so proud to stand shoulder to shoulder what these frontline offenders as they take on this no fail and incredibly important mission.β
I'd love to ask you a little bit about how SSA is engaging with election officials in addressing this question of foreign influence. So you mentioned you're providing support on the cybersecurity front you're providing support on the physical security front. What does it look like from your perspective in terms of how you're engaging with you know local election officials who are suddenly dealing with what might well be a foreign influence attempt to decrease confidence in elections. So first I want to give it tremendous credit to the SSA field for SSA has teammates across the country and all states and territories who live there work there many of whom come from there are part of those communities have been for years who are now our representatives out there serving as cybersecurity advisors, physical security advisors.
βAnd then most recently last year recognizing that challenges in terms of election security and the nuance and complexity and election administration and election infrastructure security.β
We actually hired 10 election security advisors one for each of the 10 regions that we break the country into and these folks are former election officials at the state and county level.
There are or their former election infrastructure or election IT specialists they bring over 210 years of combined experience in this space and really have been incredible leaders in this space in the years that they were in public service prior to many are former state election directors or former secretary of state CISOs so tremendous tremendous experience in leading administration and security in the space. And they've really helped us understand what tools are most effective what resources are most effective to this community for them to be able to utilize because guidance is not good if it's just words on paper that no one can do anything about right it's how do we provide guidance that is actionable and really helps those who need to take the action do so and move the needle on risk mitigation.
And so the way we've approached mitigating the threat of foreign influence operations and disinformation this election cycle is different than prior election cycles because the information environment for this election cycle is so different.
You know the the information environment 2024 is more fragmented than prior cycles there's more platforms more methods of engagement we see that.
Influence operations are not even just targeting social media platforms and t...
We have to approach this differently and especially when we recognize the scope and scale of these information operations campaigns that are adversaries can in our conducting.
βAnd so the way we've looked at this is really through three different ways so one informing the stakeholder community about the tactics that we've seen our foreign adversaries utilize in their disinformation campaigns or their influence operations.β
The development of a security guidance document we were joined by our FBI and our ODI and I colleagues and the authorship of that talk about the different tactics we have seen foreign adversaries use over the past two years in these types of influence operations. And so if you look at that over the past several months, Sissa has partnered with the FBI to do a series of public service announcements in which we're not just trying to educate the election security community but also the American people about these tactics that we have seen.
We drew on in the forward look you can see a Russian influence campaign trying to undermine American confidence in the security of election infrastructure by alleging that a distributed denial of surface attack against an election night reporting page. The results were that a ransomware attack against the county election office somehow impacted the vote casting or tabulating systems like all of these things where if you actually understand the technology and the processes you realize there's nothing there.
βBut a DDoC attack or a ransomware attack is not actually going to impact the security or integrity of the casting or counting, but our adversaries may try to convince you otherwise.β
And so to be aware of those tactics and the things we've seen them doing the past are likely to manifest again this year.
And so as we looked at the different tactics as well, we wanted to make sure the American people understood the different mediums that they could be engaged on. And so our most recent publication with FBI was two Fridays ago now where we highlighted their utilization of commercial and public relations firms to really hide their hand.
βPut down I think it was over 300 websites that we've seen utilized in some of these campaigns and I can talk more about that too in terms of the details there, but so bringing to light.β
The greater understanding of the tactics that are employed has been one way the other way has really been through training and resources with the election community to make sure they are ready and prepare to face these types of events and we do that predominantly through targeted training events but also through tabletop exercises.
And since January 2023, Sissa has conducted over 180 tabletop exercises across the country and nearly 500 trainings in total were reaching tens of thousands of election stakeholders.
Walking through the different types of incidents that they may encounter from physical cyber to foreign influence operations and most importantly how they respond. And the last thing we've really been focused on so if one is information sharing to is training and preparedness the 30 is encouraging best practices for post security incident communication. And so we've actually put out two communications guides this year for the election infrastructure security community. One on how to build out a broader public communications plan to help enhance trust and confidence and election security by showing the work that's been done.
And then this second is really helping elections stakeholders understand how to communicate during an incident response because when you talk about in 2024, what is the best mitigation to these influence operations. It's communication, it's transparency, it's having trusted authoritative sources come out with the facts and understand that. But we'll have the American public understand that in in this incredibly fractured information environment where you were getting flooded with information a thousand different ways.
That this signal through all of that noise is your state and local election o...
So we actually had a great example of this recently listeners might have seen there was a video circulating that purported to show someone ripping up ballots that have been cast for former President Trump and Bucks County Pennsylvania.
And the Bucks County GOP put out a tweet essentially saying, you know, this isn't true providing information.
And then the next day we caught a joint statement from OD and I FBI and Sissa sort of weighing in on that as well and indicating that it had been part of a Russian effort to so distrust.
βI think that that is a useful way of kind of framing what you're talking about how it works in practice. I'm wondering if you could talk about what that looked like to you from the inside and how it shows how you are thinking about this.β
To tremendous credit to the Bucks County Board of Elections and the election officials there in the state of Pennsylvania under the leadership of sectors. They're ability to quickly respond in a bipartisan manner to ensure that their voters had the accurate information and understanding is a perfect example of of what is effective at fighting back in this, you know, countering foreign influence space. And, you know, I think it's also a great example of when we say election security is national security. That's exactly why here you see Russian efforts to undermine the American public's confidence and specifically voters of that county is confidence and the security integrity of their process.
And it's just a partisan discord, right? Like that example is a perfect highlight of the two objectives that are adversaries are doubling down on every chance they can get.
βAnd I think this plays into the larger picture of what we've continued to see coming out of Russian, especially influence operations, but also Iranian and Chinese, which is they will find topics that they know are divisive.β
But they will deliberately utilize and weaponize to put Americans against each other. We've seen that with them pursuing topics like non-citizen voting and saying that that is an issue. We've seen it with deceased voting. We've seen it with voter fraud. These are all topics that we've seen Russian influence campaign season. And then try to promote both in social media as well as through the establishment of either website spoofing legitimate media institutions or creating their own. And I think this is a really important example of some of the tactics we're seeing manifest.
And you know, with something we also tried to highlight in the public service announcement with FBI a couple weeks ago, where there has been so much effort this cycle by Russia or Ron China to hide their hand behind these campaigns, because they know the more authentic it seems, the more traction it's likely to get.
βAnd so they've done things like higher commercial and public relations firms to propagate these narratives. They've hired winning and unwitting influencers to be those who are actually pushing out these narratives.β
They've done things like create what's called cyber squatting sites where or utilize cyber squatting as a tactic or essentially they make a website that looks like the real one, but is slightly off in order to impersonate it. So an example that we saw over the past several months has been both the Washington Post and Fox News where they've created these websites, reporting to be the authentic media outlets and impersonating them. And filling that website with articles that just espoused the Russian information narrative. And so a viewer may not even realize they're not on the real website, because one of the additional tactics we've seen is through targeted media ads as well as utilizing fake personas to actually push target messages out to the desired audience.
With the shortened URLs or website names where folks don't even realize what they're clicking is not the authentic website.
It looks like it is and then when they go there with they see mimics the actual website. And so it's getting harder and harder to tell what is fake from what is real because of the sophistication of these campaigns, which is why we really want to draw awareness to be sophistication of the tactics for facing this year. And we've seen our adversaries even look at really deliberate localized or regional targeting of these efforts to specific users trying to influence the views of individuals and carriers.
That Department of Justice in early September released the indictment of two ...
And in that you saw the complexity of what they were trying to achieve this year, but also the specific targeted nature to include focusing on certain battleground states because they think that's where their campaigns could be most influential.
Do your current managed services really help run your operations or are they just running in circles running isn't enough anymore.
With PWC's managed services your operations don't just run they evolve continuously powered by AI embedded directly into your workflows. So instead of maintaining yesterday's model you're building tomorrow's advantage PWC's managed services we run your operations with tech and talent so you can run faster scale smarter lead stronger.
βHi, the bully here. Why is it so important to you? Why is it so important to you?β
Every time you see my opinion, you can see my producer, but also a well-known actor, as the next one you're going to get.
You can also find all the exciting points. The crypto is now simply a bit of a nonsense. The basic app under the coins to trade and sell it, because the credit and the income is over. It's a little bit of an update. The hand-made crypto-wearing build for the LUSD in Payward Europe solution limited hand-led as the credit is now being set up by the central bank of Ireland.
βIn the lead-up to the election, I think a lot of income has been spilled about the potential effects of AI in general at the AI on the bucket of generating misinformation but also on cybersecurity.β
So two out of the three buckets that you've identified. I'm curious how you've seen this actually apply in the real world if AI has been used in a particularly new way to inform this new landscape that you described. If the threat is accessorated as some people were concerned, but I'm curious not only about how the AI has been used, but by how effective it has been. You've described some sophisticated operations. Are those actually reaching people that could be swayed?
βSo I think we have certainly seen generative AI enabled capabilities utilized in foreign influence operations. I believe there's July of this year the Department of Justice also seized two domains associated with a larger RT influence operation.β
That was leveraging a software known as milliorator, which was this generative AI enabled tool to develop personas and then craft both synthetic text and images to again really just leverage this bot farm to push their narratives and achieve the objectives of their influence operations. The examples like that manifest. On the cyber side, we've also seen the ability for this to really lower the bar for malicious actor needing to know or have cyber skills in order to conduct nefarious cyber activity.
And so while generative AI has not introduced any fundamentally new risks to this election cycle, it has exacerbated those in the foreign influence operation and disinformation space and the cyber domain. Our really good news on the cyber domain is we, again, going back to the beginning of the conversation, we have made so much progress with the election security community in this space that when you look at the state of election infrastructure security in 2024, it is more secure and more resilient than it has ever been.
I think it's really important to unpack what we mean when we say that. So when we're talking about why we have such confidence in election infrastructure and specifically why we are so confident that a malicious actor could not at scale materially impact the outcome of the presidential election without detection.
Because of a few different things so first for those who don't know like states each run elections differently. If you've seen one state selection, you've seen one state selection.
And even within states many jurisdictions do things differently too. So we're talking about different processes different systems different vendors. The inherent to this diversity and decentralized nature is this tremendous resilience right because you can't just impact one thing that will have this cascading effect across the nation.
In addition to the diversity and decentralized nature, you also have layers u...
So that go into administering elections. So there are pre-election testing of systems. There's post-election day audits.
βAnd then when you look at the actual systems themselves, the machines that Americans use to vote on are not connected to the internet.β
So all of these are really important measures to ensure the security and resilience on the cyber side of our nation's infrastructure. And I think the other really important fact in terms of a positive trend that we've seen continue over numerous federal election cycles is the increasing number of paper records.
So for the 2024 election over 97% of registered voters in America live in jurisdictions where they will have a paper record that they can verify when they vote.
So that's another really important step when it comes to confidence in the outcome of the election and the ability to count or recount audit as necessary. So I think all of that is really what plays into why we have tremendous confidence despite the fact that yes, there are the eye capabilities have enabled threats to be greater the cycle than passed or more sophisticated. We also wanted to ask you about deepfakes specifically, which I think has been kind of something that people have been pretty frightened about this election cycle.
There were a lot of, you know, kind of the sky is falling articles that went around about how, you know, no one was going to know what was true, that kind of thing.
I feel like I've seen increasing coverage of experts kind of saying, actually, you know, maybe it's not so bad. So I'm curious what your perception is of the role of the deepfakes have played or maybe playing and also to what extent you're seeing the effects of what I know some people, Bobby Chesney and Daniel, etc. and have called the liars dividend, this idea that even if something isn't a deepfake, the fact that it could potentially have been a deepfake works to kind of decrease trust in what people are seeing in hearing.
So deepfakes, as you know, have been around, will be for generative eye was really injected into the mainstream and we've had to deal with the threat posed by deepfakes for years. And so I think that's also the good news story here, it goes back to what we're seeing this cycle. Well, more complex is not new and we're just building upon years of defense and readiness to ensure the security and integrity of this election.
βI would want to point back to what we saw in January, where we had, I think, a really effective and compelling example of how even when this, this more sophisticated technology is used, we can still push back and overcome.β
And so if you remember in January, the day before the New Hampshire primary, a robocole came out reporting to be president Biden, what the parent intention of trying to influence democratic voters to not turn out for the next day's presidential primary and to save their vote for November. Well, once those calls started happening, and the new Hampshire attorney general was alerted John Formella, he went into immediate action, where he released a public statement saying, "We are aware of these calls, they're suspicious, they're under investigation, and for the voters of New Hampshire to not give any credence to the messages that are being conveyed, that for authoritative and accurate information about voting,
to turn to their state's chief election official, Dave Scanlon, the Secretary of State and his office, for the accurate information, and for them to go out and vote that next day, you know, or they're willing and they're choosing, but to disregard the information in the robocole. So after the New Hampshire attorney general comes out with that press release, the New Hampshire Secretary of State Dave Scanlon and his team is chief staff, Dave Wang, they go into overdrive, right, in terms of retweeting that statement, getting out and every immediate outlet they can, to ensure that the New Hampshire voters understood that this robocole was inaccurate, it's not true, it's under investigation,
βand here is the actual information New Hampshire voters needed to hear and to know. And, you know, I think the New Hampshire Secretary of State has said,β
that turnout that actually happened on the presidential primary was even higher than what he had projected despite that robocole and attempts at suppression. And so, since then, you've also seen legal action taken against those who are responsible. You've also seen the FCC take action to hold the individual responsible accountable for their violations, using the regulatory power there. And so, I think that, yes, defects are problematic, but we also have a range of tools that we can use to mitigate their impact, no matter how compelling they may be.
I think last week in Bux County, Pennsylvania is another great example where,...
Now, it is our rule as the federal government to support those efforts when we know a foreign adversaries behind them and to ensure that we are being as transparent as possible with the American people.
βAnd I think that's another really important highlight when we talk about what's different in 2024 than in prior cycles.β
In 2022, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence established the Foreign Law and Influence Center, which is really leading the US government's intelligence efforts around this space and how adversaries are trying to undermine American national security interests. In addition to that, this year, we have seen tremendous transparency by the federal government in this space, letting not just again the election security community, but the American people know about the threats against our democratic institutions.
And also as a society, by our adversaries, who are looking to, again, stoke domestic discord to further their own foreign policy objectives.
And reflection of this is, since mid-Summer, we've had six election threat updates from the Director of National Intelligence and her team, specifically talking about this. The four public servants announcements from SISSA and the FBI, again, unpacking how some of these things may manifest and specifically the tactics we've seen.
βSo I think while deep thanks may be more compelling than ever, you know, we've also really ratcheted up the tools that our disposal to counter and to fight back.β
And I think again, the Department of Justice's actions this year with respect to disrupting some of these foreign influence networks and infrastructure and holding those responsible legally accountable is a reflection of the federal government is not just going to talk about and illuminate.
We'll do that, but we're also going to disrupt and deter.
I was struck by a particular use of deep fakes that was described in one of the SISSA fact sheets that described the types of threats that we should all be aware ahead of the election. And it's maybe a use of deep fakes that doesn't really get you headlines, but it's the use of a generated content. And and I'm quoting here as such as compromising deep fake videos that could be used to harass impersonate an or diligent device election officials. Have you seen that happen and, you know, what is the advice or support that SISSA can offer to someone who may be experiencing that.
So we have not seen that manifest yet this cycle. We've predominantly seen those types of attacks focused around the process itself or polarizing policy topics.
And so we remain incredibly vigilant and recognize that that could be a tactic that is, you know, in reserve and further employed.
βI think the lot of this also comes down to and the most recent national intelligence council member random does declassify by the director of national intelligence last week captures a lot of this.β
And so does our most recent public service announcement as SISSA, but we are also very aware of the likely for a hush of foreign influence activity. That we America are going to face and the days and weeks immediately after the election. We recognize that our foreign adversaries have learned from prior cycles and know that that period of time, especially in the days immediately after the election. When unofficial results are still coming in and the official certification process is still being run by election officials and each state chief election officials working through that process to certify the final results.
And so with time is ripe for these types of influence operations campaigns to so uncertainty around the outcome. And again, just try to stoke partisan discord domestically. And that's regardless of how the election plays out. That's agnostic to the outcome. Again, the intention here by Russia, Iran, China is really to stoke domestic discord and to cross American confidence in our democratic institutions.
And so that period after is also where we see this heightened threat environment for election officials who could be deliberately targeted. We saw this in 2020 when Iran created the enemies of the people website, which deliberately targeted certain election officials. Again, trying to stoke partisan outrage against certain individuals. And so I think while we haven't seen all of these tactics manifest yet, we are certainly very concerned and remain vigilant over what we may see, but I think that's the other message for the American people is.
Look, we have seen more than ever in this cycle.
And it's not even election day.
βSo we have to be ready for the onslaught of these types of campaigns after.β
And they're probably going to be pretty compelling because of technology because of gender day I enabled capabilities. We cannot let our adversaries win. We cannot do the work of our adversaries for them.
And especially when it comes to how these types of influence operations can lead to the manifestation of physical violence.
In July, Ode and I put out a separate statement talking about how the Iranian government was doing and influence operation trying to foment protests around the Israel Gaza conflict. This goes back to my point earlier about the crossed domain operations. How folks are using activities in one domain to generate results and another. Our adversaries may absolutely try to leverage narratives that will lead to violence. We've already seen how threats and violence targeting election officials manifested after 2020 and continue to.
We have to be better than that. We have to say this is not who we are as a nation, not in America. And really just keep reminding ourselves that this is exactly what our adversaries are trying to do and we cannot let them win. So I'm curious if one of the differences in this election cycle pertains to the role that the private sector, especially companies that focus on gender to AI. The role that they have. I believe in a conversation that that quintactually had about one of these these groups. The guest Thomas Rick and you can please correct me Quinta. He talked about the visibility that companies have into the generative AI content, which is very different from the visibility that maybe social media companies could have on this information efforts that were happening on their sides.
And I'm wondering if that allows them to be more proactive in flagging and taking down this type of content and if that's something that is having any sort of effect in this election. So I would defer to the private companies for how they pursue and their private entities make their own decisions.
βWhat I will say is I think we have seen companies across the board and many ways come out to bring light to a lot of the form one influence activities that they are seeing.β
And that's that's an important part of this too because they do have unique insight and visibility based on what's happening on their network and their infrastructure. You know, a big part of who Sissa is as a federal government agency is we are a partnership agency. We recognize that national security is a team sport. And it's not just the federal government in this alone. We have to do this together. Especially when it comes to critical infrastructure security where the overwhelming majority of our nation's critical infrastructure is owned and operated by the private sector.
We have to work together to ensure we are protecting and preserving our nation's top security interests and that includes election security. Again, back to 2016 it was a wake-up call election security is national security and while elections may be political election security is not. So we have to work together across all lines to ensure that we are preserving the most sacred thing we have as a country which is our democracy. I want to make sure we touch on one issue that I've often been thinking about in context of these conversations around, you know, foreign malign influence.
So, for example, the justice department, I know Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco made a big point when these indictments were announced of saying, you know, this is this is something that we're looking at because these are foreign actors, it is agnostic to the content, right?
βAnd I think that's obviously important and you all and other agencies have made that very, very clear in all your statements about this.β
But it is also true that in the wake of the 2020 election, there was a lot of information flying around many of it from people who were genuinely trying to make sense of what was a confusing situation that did not necessarily originate from outside the United States.
But originated within it. And I'm conscious that this creates a, you know, it's a difficult situation obviously for government agencies because it does implicate potentially first amendment rights.
We've been talking here about, you know, foreign influence primarily and sort of issues of cyber and physical security. But I did want to raise this issue just to make sure that I asked you about it and ask houses is thinking about that aspect of things this time around. Yeah, no, I think you bring up a really important point, right, which is America is the greatest nation in the world because of our freedoms and so the freedom to express our opinions is an incredibly important part of who we are as a nation.
That being said, when people like nostic to politics or platforms or partisan...
In accurate false misleading information about our nation's democratic process. We are doing the work of our foreign adversaries for them.
βAnd I think we really have to realize that we're doing nothing but hurting ourselves as a nation and helping them pit us against one another.β
And so I think that this is where I hope we as a country can really check ourselves and realize that.
Again, regardless of the outcome elections are this incredible moment in our history of a nation to have hope and to unify around the freedom to choose and to make our political voices heard.
And that is a very powerful thing and that is deliberately being targeted by our adversaries who look to weaken us and attack something that is so near and so dear and so sacred as our democratic process to do so. And so I think this is hopefully an area where we can unify and know that we have to defend this process together. Is there anything else that you'd like to touch on before we go? Yeah, I know I mean, I think this is going to a great conversation and really grateful for the opportunity. I think I hope that folks who listen to this hear the story of an incredible group of heroes, which is really a lot of state and local public servants who are out there in this tireless endeavor to bring the democratic process to the American motor to deliver to the American motor.
βFree, fair, and safe and secure elections.β
And that these public servants are not faceless bureaucrats.
Stay local election officials are heroes and they're parts of our community. There are neighbors, there are family members, there are friends, there are people we see in the grocery stores or community events. And they deserve our respect, our admiration and our gratitude. And so this year, I hope we recognize especially because of the actions of our adversaries who are intent on undermining American standing in the world and to do so attacking our democratic institutions. I hope we recognize that this is a call the action for all Americans to come together and to unify because it's our democracy to defend.
So really appreciate the time today to talk about it. You know, we are incredibly confident and the insecurity and integrity of our democratic institutions. And that the outcome of the 2024 election regardless of what that is will reflect the will of the American people. And that election officials will once again overcome all of this with the help of private partners and public partners and us. To ensure free fair, safe and secure elections to the American people. All right, Kit Kahnley, thank you so much for taking the time.
Thank you all, really appreciate it. The lawfare podcast is produced in cooperation with the Brookings Institution. You can get ad free versions of this and other lawfare podcasts but becoming a lawfare material supporter. Through a website, lawfaremedia.org/support. You'll also get access to special events and other content available only to our supporters.
Please rate and review us wherever you get your podcasts. Look out for our other podcasts, including rational security, chatter, allies, and the aftermath. Our latest lawfare presents podcast series on the government's response to January 6th. And check out our written work at lawfaremedia.org. The podcast is edited by Jen Patio, and your audio engineer this episode was no mass band of goat rodeo.
Our theme song is from Aller by Music.
As always, thanks for listening.
βDo your current managed services really help run your operations or are they just running in circles?β
Running isn't enough anymore. With PWC's managed services, your operations don't just run. They evolve continuously, powered by AI embedded directly into your workflows. So instead of maintaining yesterday's model, you're building tomorrow's advantage. PWC's managed services.
We run your operations with tech and talent, so you can run faster, scale smarter, lead stronger.


