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Latest coverage for Propaganda

Propaganda coverage examines how deceptive narratives can support influence operations, social engineering, and cyberattacks against targeted audiences.

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Background for this topic.

Propaganda is organized communication intended to shape beliefs or behavior in support of a political or strategic objective. It may use accurate, selective, misleading, or fabricated information; in security reporting, the term usually concerns digitally enabled influence operations rather than ordinary disagreement or opinion.

Security-relevant campaigns can exploit coordinated inauthentic accounts, automated amplification, compromised profiles, fabricated websites, or synthetic media to make a narrative appear credible or widespread. Practitioners should assess source provenance, account and domain activity, and possible coordination without assuming that disputed content is malicious. Useful controls include protecting official accounts with strong authentication, monitoring for impersonation and coordinated abuse, preserving evidence for threat intelligence, and using verified communication channels during incidents. Privacy and free-expression constraints also matter when organizations moderate or attribute suspected propaganda.

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Election tech is fine – it's all thise idiots buying into the propaganda that's worrying Jen Easterly Black Hat US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) director Jen Easterly and her counterparts from the UK and EU want the world to know that, when it comes to securing elections, they've never been more prepared.…