U.S. Midterms Have a Cyber Problem, but It's Not at the Ballot Box
gnabgib
48 points
50 comments
June 02, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 93.2ms across 9,294 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- The White House App Is Riddled with Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities OrangePilled · 13 pts · April 04, 2026 · 51% similar
- U.S. Cybersecurity Agency Leaves Its Digital Keys Out in Public on GitHub neogodless · 112 pts · May 19, 2026 · 51% similar
- Hackers have breached tank readers at US gas stations berkeleyjunk · 34 pts · May 15, 2026 · 50% similar
- Georgia's Voting Technology Blunder hn_acker · 12 pts · April 18, 2026 · 50% similar
- Canadian election databases use "canary traps"–and they work ColinWright · 43 pts · May 04, 2026 · 49% similar
Discussion Highlights (7 comments)
Brendinooo
>Russian-linked Doppelganger operations have systematically cloned major media infrastructure (Reuters, The Washington Post, Fox News) using lookalike domains that replicate visual design and URL structure closely enough to pass casual inspection. This purpose-built impersonation infrastructure is supported by fake personas, AI-assisted content, and paid amplification across mainstream social platforms. Are there any live examples out there? Similar to how I like to look at scam/phishing emails to see how they work, I'm interested in seeing how sophisticated these are/are not.
avaer
It's interesting to have a conversation with people over politics these days, sometimes it's like people don't live in the same reality anymore. It's probably not far from the truth. To a first approximation, nothing is verified, people see a number on social media as a proxy for accuracy. Even if it's completely wrong, it doesn't matter because you're among friends. Memes let insane ideas spread like a virus, the only criterion is whether they can survive against other memes. Grounding in reality is an idea's death sentence, because of the bullshit asymmetry principle. And now the tools are there for anyone to generate bullshit at a scale commensurate to their wallet. I shudder to think what this means for elections. At least I appreciate that the article attaches some numbers to it.
himata4113
The problem with voting is that people are simply not engaged in politics anymore. I have never voted and never will. To be impactful you have to be a politician and that's a full-time job which lives off donations. We need more politicans, but we don't have a reward structure to support them so we have too few politicians which means the few are funded by powerful people making even fewer make the decisions. Just to make myself clear, when I say politicians I mean someone who tries to bring politican change, not someone who works in the government making decisions. Democracy sounds nice, but it assumes people want to participate in it: actively validate facts, find truthful information not just vote whoever promises more of what you like. Of course on the other hand you have the european federation: they are able to make unpopular choices, but at a steep cost which ends up hurting the member states and making the general population pretty hateful of the european central government. Governments are too big to change, but what we have doesn't work and we're probably going to be in a world of hurt as the american type democracy(japan, australia, etc) is being manipulated from all sides, federations are uncompetitive and dictatorships becoming the strongest government there is being able to accelerate faster than anyone else and becoming the defacto world power.
Jimmc414
I strongly recommend anyone interested to do a quick search of the leadership of checkpoint.com and if they have ties to any foreign intelligence.
dabinat
I feel like this may be made worse by the rise in paywalls from media companies. I understand times are difficult and they need to make money, but it’s harder to counter disinformation if only those with money can see it. Disinformation will always be free to view.
jimbob45
They’ve done this to my workplace too. We have several domains for employee-concerning content and they’ve mirrored them and placed them at the top of Google’s search results. If you’ve forgotten the URL and go to Google it, you can get phished super easily. I can see the elderly and the tech illiterate falling for similar schemes with mirrors of the NYT, CNN, FOX, etc.
kderbe
PBS NewsHour interviewed one of Check Point's security evangelists this evening to discuss this same report. The discussion is a bit broader in scope than this blog post. https://youtu.be/8bG7J3mjH5s?t=71 (I linked directly to the interview, skipping the news anchor's intro.)