Deepfakes are here and can be dangerous, but ignore the alarmists – they won’t harm our elections | Ciaran Martin
Although we can't be complacent about digital interference in our democracy, this new wave of hysteria is not the answer
Sixteen days before the Brexit referendum, and only two days before the deadline to apply to cast a ballot, the IT system for voter registrations collapsed. The remain and leave campaigns were forced to agree a 48-hour registration extension. Around the same time, evidence was beginning to emerge of a major Russian hack-and-leak" operation targeting the US presidential election. Inevitably, questions arose as to whether the Russians had successfully disrupted the Brexit vote.
The truth was more embarrassingly simple. A comprehensive technical investigation, supported by the National Cyber Security Centre - which I headed at the time - set out in detail what had happened. A TV debate on Brexit had generated unexpected interest. Applications spiked to double those projected. The website couldn't cope and crashed. There was no sign of any hostile activity.
Ciaran Martin is a professor at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford, and a former chief executive of the National Cyber Security Centre
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