The Washington Post is reporting that officials are doubtful that the hackers are capable of manipulating the voting system, but think it's a possibility that Russia could meddle after the election to throw the results into question.
Since voting for a president is not something done nationally – in that each state conducts its own election process – officials say it would be extremely difficult for the Russians to manipulate a large number of votes, the story explained.
"States ensure that voting machines are not connected to the Internet, and there are numerous checks and balances as well as extensive oversight at multiple levels built into our election process," an senior administration official told NBC News.
Government security agencies have, however, seen evidence that Russian hackers have “scanned” state voter databases and computer systems. A U.S. official told The Post, “Whether they were really trying hard to get in, it’s not clear.”
The NBC report said officials thought it was more likely that hackers would use social media to manipulate information or fool voters. The government officials, who were not named in the story, said they could see a cyber-attack that shuts down part of the internet – something similar to what happened in October where Twitter, Spotify and PayPal were knock offline for a time.
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