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Local governments could perform a simple upgrade to make it clear to voters that they are reading from a legitimate source. But on the whole, they aren't doing it.
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Some worry that New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner's office was too slow to acknowledge the scale of the election security problem and focused on addressing the wrong challenges.
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In an exclusive interview with NPR, election threats executive Shelby Pierson says more nations may attempt more types of interference in the U.S.
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The bureau was faulted after the Russian attack on the 2016 election for keeping too much information from state and local authorities. It says it'll use a new policy going forward.
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Chinese intelligence officers like to use the professional social network � in which people often accept pings from strangers � to recruit sources within the U.S. government.
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The country's seventh-largest bank says the information was taken from a hack of credit card applications submitted over a 14-year period.
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The state of Vermont is following the lead of the U.S. government and has banned information technology products from a Russian company and several�
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Concerns that Chinese technology may threaten U.S. cybersecurity have surfaced in Vermont.Vermont Telephone Company, based in Springfield, says it does�
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The state of Vermont will spend millions of dollars on cybersecurity through 2019 to keep the data you share with the state—like at the DMV or when you do�
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Governor Phil Scott has some serious concerns about Vermont's cyber safety. He recently noted that since January, the state has had 3.3 million cyber�