Why a Crackdown on Facebook, Google and Twitter Could Come from the States Before Congress

Alonzo Washington delivered a dire warning to his fellow delegates in Maryland’s legislature last month: Russia might try to influence their elections, too.

So the Democratic veteran set about doing something that’s eluded his federal counterparts in the nation’s capital: advancing legislation to regulate tech giants like Facebook, Google and Twitter.

At a time when the U.S. Congress seems paralyzed by partisanship — and either too reluctant or distracted to take on Silicon Valley’s most powerful players — Maryland is among a growing roster of states trying to remedy some of the most pressing ills of the digital age.

Along with Maryland, leaders from New York to Washington state have pitched new bills that would make more information about online political ads available to local voters. In California, meanwhile, state leaders are taking aim at the scourge of social-media bots, or networks of computer-directed accounts often used to amplify misinformation.

“We are literally seeing states become the laboratories of democracy that people have talked about because there’s tremendous public demand right now,” said Shum Preston, the national director of advocacy and communications for Common Sense Kids Action, an activist group that has helped advance bot legislation in California.

“The country is clamoring for these bills, they’re clamoring for these protections online,” he said, “and Washington is falling down on the job.”

Of course, local policymakers face the same challenges as their federal brethren: They must navigate their legislatures’ labyrinthine corridors of power, explaining complex tech issues to their political peers, who may not know the industry well.

If they succeed, however, supporters hope they might soon spur other states — and, eventually, the federal government — to take similar action.

Over the past year, the U.S. Congress has convened hearings and threatened Facebook, Google, Twitter and their Silicon Valley counterparts with new regulation. In response to Russia’s efforts to spread online propaganda during the 2016 election, for example, Democratic Sens. Mark R. Warner (Va.) and Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) introduced a bill that would impose a host of new ad-transparency requirements on major web platforms.

But their Honest Ads Act hasn’t been formally debated almost five months since its introduction. Its passage in time for the 2018 midterm elections seems increasingly unlikely. Other federal efforts to rein in the tech industry similarly have faltered. In the meantime, Facebook, Google and Twitter each has announced plans to disclose more information about their advertisers to users in a bid to ward off federal regulation.

Outside the nation’s capital, however, the looming fear is that one state seeking to set new rules governing the tech industry might prompt others to follow suit. That could create a regulatory landscape where tech giants have to submit to a host of fresh, potentially conflicting laws governing content on their platforms.

“There certainly has been an uptick of activity in the states on internet-related issues,” said Robert Callahan, the vice president for state government affairs at the Internet Association, a D.C.-based lobbying group. “As always, we will be working closely with policymakers around the country to ensure they understand the real-world implications that any given policy proposal could have on this bright spot in our economy.”

One emerging battleground is Maryland, where legislators this year have proposed a new bill that would require tech companies to make copies of political ads about state candidates available for public inspection. The bill backed by Alonzo Washington, the delegate from Maryland, had a February hearing in the state House, and the Senate convened its own session Thursday.

“It wasn’t really not until things happened in 2016 that there was interest,” said Bradley Shear, a Maryland lawyer who specializes in social media and testified at the House hearing.

In New York on Wednesday, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo teamed up with lawmakers in the state Assembly to pass its own version of the federal Honest Ads Act. It still must survive a vote in the Republican-controlled state Senate.

“You have a total lack of regulation of the social media space,” the governor told reporters.

Even cities are taking on tech giants: Officials in Seattle are trying to tap decades-old campaign finance rules to force Facebook and Google to disclose more data about who pays for political ads in local elections. Google submitted a “binder full of information” in response to the city’s recent inquiries, but Facebook has produced only a “two-page spreadsheet,” said Wayne Barnett, the executive director of the Seattle’s elections commission. Facebook is now staring down a potential fine.

“I don’t think anybody had ever tested the law when it came to online social platforms until there was a local reporter here who attempted to get this information in December,” he said.

In some cases, the tech industry has mobilized to fight off any new ad regulation. This year, Facebook joined Google, Twitter and other tech giants that are part of the Internet Association to ward off a bill in Washington state that also might have subjected them to tougher transparency requirements. Facebook is also endeavoring to “weaken the bill” in Maryland, Shear said.

Asked about its lobbying, Will Castleberry, the vice president for state and local public policy at Facebook, stressed the social giant is ready to work with lawmakers on the issue.

“Facebook is firmly committed to transparency in political advertising as well as to protecting our platforms and the people who use them from bad actors trying to undermine our democracy,” he said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for Google did not respond to an email seeking comment. A spokeswoman for Twitter declined to comment.

Nevertheless, election watchdogs stress that they’re angling to advance additional transparency bills in other legislatures around the country.

“We’ve been talking to groups and individual policymakers in California about doing something similar,” said Ian Vandewalker, senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice. The organization testified in support of Maryland’s legislation.

For now, California has a different target in mind: bots.

Studies suggest that as many as 15 percent of Twitter users are automated accounts. And while Twitter and its peers argue that bots may be useful — helping to share critical information about inclement weather, for example — these remote-controlled networks often are deployed to amplify misinformation or overwhelm online bystanders with harassment.

In response, lawmakers in the Golden State’s legislature are pushing proposals that seek to regulate bots. One measure, from Democratic Sen. Bob Hertzberg, would require companies like Twitter to label every account that isn’t operated by a human. The proposal came about with the help of groups like Common Sense Kids Action.

“We know technologically when these accounts are open whether they’re real or fake,” said Hertzberg, who predicted a hearing as soon as this month.

Hertzberg is conversant in tech issues like cryptocurrencies, and he previously served as speaker of the state Assembly. He said he remains in contact with other state legislative leaders and had already spoken to them about his bill.

“I would suggest, because of the size of California and our brand,” the hope is to “find other states to help to do the same thing,” he said.

Source: The Washington Post
Author: Tony Romm
Date: March 2, 2018

After Russian Tampering, Maryland Officials Look to Improve Election Defenses

As details emerge of the Russian campaign to influence the 2016 election, officials in Maryland are working to protect the state’s voting system for this year and beyond.

State elections officials are working with federal authorities to shore up Maryland’s defenses against tampering with electronic voting systems and electoral rolls. Lawmakers have introduced proposals to fix perceived flaws, audit results more rigorously and to compel greater disclosures about advertising on social media.

Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III has accused 13 Russians in a massive and covert trolling campaign to widen social and political fissures in the United States and disrupt the 2016 election. In the federal indictment this month, prosecutors said the effort was aimed in part at helping Republican Donald Trump defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

The indictment identified a social media account named “Blacktivist” on the photo-sharing site Instagram as a Russian troll. A Facebook account of the same name had attempted to promote a rally in Baltimore on the anniversary of the death of Freddie Gray. More than 250 of the Russia-linked ads that Facebook turned over to Congress last fall targeted social media users in Maryland. And the Department of Homeland Security has said Russian hackers took at least one run at Maryland’s computerized voter registration system during the 2016 election cycle.

Marylanders will vote this year for a governor and members of Congress. The nation’s intelligence chiefs told the Senate this month that Russia remains at work to interfere with the midterm elections.

Maryland elections administrator Linda Lamone assured state lawmakers this month that the State Board of Elections is on top of the challenges. She told the Senate Budget & Taxation Committee that she had met with U.S. intelligence agencies and would be given a security clearance that would allow her access to the most sensitive information.

“Both the federal government and us are taking this very, very seriously,” she said. “Everybody’s working as a team.”

Lamone said Maryland’s online data is all encrypted and monitored 24/7. The systems have multiple layers of protection, officials say, and the most sensitive parts are not connected to the Internet.

Assessments of Maryland’s preparedness differ.

In a nationwide report this month, the Washington-based Center for America Progress gave the state a B, the highest grade it awarded. The liberal think tank praised the use of paper ballots and optical scanners, which allow officials to create a verifiable trail should the vote be questioned. It gave the state solid marks for its ballot-counting and its certification and testing of voting machines.

The center found Maryland’s procedures for conducting post-election audits deficient.

“Its failure to carry out post-election audits that test the accuracy of election outcomes leaves the state open to undetected hacking and other Election Day problems,” the center said. It criticized Maryland for conducting post-election audits electronically rather than by hand.

“Perhaps most troublesome is the fact that the results of an audit cannot reverse the preliminary outcome of an audited contest if an error is detected,” the center said.

Nikki Charlson, deputy administrator of the state elections board, says precinct-level processes make hand audits impractical.

She says post-election electronic tabulations are made by a contractor to identify polling places where there might have been problems. If the electronic retabulation finds a discrepancy, she says, election officials will go to the original ballots for a hand count that can be used to change results.

Poorvi Vora, a professor of computer science at George Washington University, says Maryland is among the worst of the 50 states in securing absentee ballots.

The state allows voters to request absentee ballots through its web site and mark them online before mailing them in. That function is part of the system that allows voters to register online.

It’s also the system that hackers probed in August 2016. Charlson said they did not breach it.

Vora worries that hackers could use the system to request multiple absentee ballots using multiple identities.

“It would be crazy for Maryland to continue with its absentee ballot delivery after the indictment,” she said. She’s concerned that the state wouldn’t be able to distinguish between the real requests and the fake, causing chaos when voters showed up at the polls.

Vora says she and other computer scientists have repeatedly raised concerns with the State Board of Elections.

“They listen to me, they ask questions, seem to understand the problems,” she said. “Then, nothing.”

Charlson says the state has mechanisms to detect a spate of fraudulent requests for absentee ballots. Among them, she said, would be the voters themselves, showing up at polling places to vote after absentee ballots had been fraudulently ordered in their names.

“Early voting gives us an early window into if this situation happens,” she said.

Markus Rauschecker, cybersecurity director at the University of Maryland Center for Health and Homeland Security, says all election systems face a significant threat.

“It’s a tremendous concern in my view,” he said.

The threat is not just that hackers would try to reverse the results of an election, he says, but also that they would try to bring about widespread disruption of the voting process.

“The chaos would be just as problematic, because it would put into jeopardy the legitimacy of the election process,” he said. “The likelihood of that happening versus changing the votes is much greater.”

State lawmakers are considering several bills.

Del. Alonzo Washington, the Prince George’s County Democrat who chairs the House Ways & Means subcommittee on election law, would restrict the use of the electronic system for marking absentee ballots to the disabled and overseas and military voters. The technology is supported by advocates for the blind, but computer analysts consider it a vulnerability.

Another Washington bill would require the elections board to report any security incidents to the legislature within seven days. He said lawmakers didn’t learn about the 2016 hacking attempt until seven months later.

A third bill would impose strict reporting requirements on online political advertising, particularly when it comes from foreign sources or is paid for in foreign currency.

“We are doing the best we can in the state of Maryland, but there can be fixes,” Washington said. “We’re going to get something done this year — absolutely.”

Del. Anne Kaiser, who chairs the Ways & Means Committee, is sponsoring a bill that would beef up auditing of Maryland elections

Democratic Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller took to the floor Wednesday — something he does only rarely — to speak against a committee-approved bill setting up procedures for foreign delegations to observe elections in Maryland.

The measure had drawn fire from Republicans. Miller, a Democrat, agreed it was a bad idea.

“Our electoral processes were attacked,” Miller said. “We need to make sure nothing like this happens again.”

The measure was sent back to committee, almost certainly killing it.

Source: The Baltimore Sun
Author: Michael Dresser
Date: February 23, 2018

Hogan, Democrat Introduce Bills Creating School Watchdogs

Prompted by alleged grade-fixing in Prince George’s County Public Schools and perjury and theft allegations in the Baltimore area, a pair of bills in the General Assembly would establish investigative offices to oversee schools in Maryland.

Republican Gov. Larry Hogan and a Democratic lawmaker each are attempting to get their own education accountability bills passed this year.

The bills come after state Department of Education officials hired a Washington-based firm, Alvarez & Marsal Public Sector Services, to audit graduation rates in the Prince George’s County public school system, following a letter that several school board members wrote to Hogan citing “widespread systemic corruption.”

The audit used sample groups taken from the 2016 and 2017 graduating classes and found that, on average, nearly 5 percent of the students had been ineligible to graduate. An additional 24.5 percent, on average, were lacking documentation to verify that they were qualified to graduate.

Because it was based on a sample, the audit report did not identify system-wide fraud in the Prince George’s County school system.

Baltimore County Superintendent Dallas Dance was indicted earlier this year on four counts of perjury following an investigation that concluded he failed to disclose almost $147,000 from private consulting firms. His successor, Verletta White, was also reported to have failed to disclose money earned from private firms.

Former Baltimore Community High School principal Leslie Lewis pleaded guilty to stealing more than $58,000 from the school.

Hogan’s response was the introduction of the Accountability in Education Act of 2018 (Senate bill 302 and House bill 355) to create an independent unit, the Office of the State Education Investigator General, within the Maryland State Department of Education.

“This lack of accountability in education systems all across our state cannot and will not be tolerated by our administration,” said Hogan in a statement. “Not addressing it would mean that we are failing Maryland taxpayers, and – more importantly – failing our children who need help the most.”

Under Hogan’s plan, the Investigator General, as a part of an Education Monitoring Unit, would be charged with investigating complaints of unethical conduct in Maryland public schools.

A representative of the state teachers’ union said he is concerned that the majority of the members – five – are appointed by the governor with the other four – two each – by the Senate president and speaker of the House. This group then evaluates candidates and makes a recommendation to the governor for a new Investigator General.

“We don’t think the answer is to politicize the schools,” said Steven Hershkowitz, press secretary for the Maryland State Education Association.

Another bill, sponsored by Delegate Alonzo T. Washington, D-Prince George’s, puts power in local hands by authorizing county commissioners or the city or county to establish an Office of the Investigator General in a local school system. These local offices would be able to conduct their own investigations without the need for state involvement under this legislation, House bill 1492.

“I don’t think it is necessary to have a statewide inspector,” Washington told Capital News Service Tuesday. “Our local jurisdictions can handle this issue.”

Through a third bill, House bill 184, Washington is also working to establish an Inspector General solely in Prince George’s County.

Source: NBCWashington
Author: Hannah Brockway
Date: February 22, 2018

Md. Bill Would Require Uniform Reports When Police Agencies Kill Civilians

Del. Washington’s bill requiring reporting on police homicides passes the General Assembly.

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Empower Aspiring Students

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