Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. needs change to keep cyber threats out of its election process: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2020 08:21 PM
  • B.C. needs change to keep cyber threats out of its election process: report

British Columbia's chief electoral officer is recommending the government make several changes to protect the provincial electoral process from foreign interference, misleading advertising and impersonation.

A report submitted to the legislature from Anton Boegman says cyber threats have jeopardized the integrity of free and fair elections around the world.

An election in B.C. is scheduled for 2021 and the report says that while such threats haven't been widely seen in the province, the risks they represent to the electoral process are real.

Disinformation campaigns and election interference have been well documented during the 2016 Brexit vote in the United Kingdom and the U.S. election in 2016.

Boegman's report says cyber threats operate in a space that hasn't been contemplated by current legislation and they compromise provisions intended for a fair, transparent and accountable election process.

If adopted by members of the legislature, the report says the recommendations would give Elections BC tools regulate digital campaigning and mitigate the risks of the threats to electoral integrity.

"These recommendations will ensure our electoral legislation is fit-for-purpose in the 21st century," Boegman says in a news release. "While many provisions in current legislation are equally effective regardless of whether campaigning is analog or digital, certain aspects should be changed to ensure our regulatory framework is effective in today's digital environment."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Morneau Says Ottawa Will Announce Support For Those Quarantined Due To COVID-19

TORONTO - The federal government is preparing to undertake measures designed to protect Canadians and the country’s economy from the outbreak of a novel form of coronavirus.

Morneau Says Ottawa Will Announce Support For Those Quarantined Due To COVID-19

Tim Hortons Temporarily Stops Accepting Reusable Cups Amid COVID-19 Concerns

TORONTO - Tim Hortons says it will temporarily stop accepting reusable cups brought in by customers amid concerns about the novel coronavirus outbreak.    

Tim Hortons Temporarily Stops Accepting Reusable Cups Amid COVID-19 Concerns

Montreal-Area Commuter Rail Service To Resume After Dismantling Of Blockade

Commuter rail operator Exo says the first train is scheduled to leave the Candiac station south of Montreal at 3:55 p.m.

Montreal-Area Commuter Rail Service To Resume After Dismantling Of Blockade

Indigenous Experts Call For Return Of Countless Treasured Belongings Held In Museums

"All of the things that would have been interwoven prior to contact and just part of everyday life were torn apart and cast in a thousand directions," says Lou-ann Neel, a Kwakwaka'wakw artist and repatriation specialist at the Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria.

Indigenous Experts Call For Return Of Countless Treasured Belongings Held In Museums

Recognition Of Title Rights 'Still A Struggle' For First Nation After Court Win

As members of the Wet'suwet'en Nation mull a draft deal over rights and title, another Indigenous community knows what that kind of recognition could look like.

Recognition Of Title Rights 'Still A Struggle' For First Nation After Court Win

Eight New COVID-19 Cases In B.C., But Province Says Jump Expected

VICTORIA - British Columbia has announced eight new cases of COVID-19, including the first apparent community transmission of the virus in the province.

Eight New COVID-19 Cases In B.C., But Province Says Jump Expected