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Election Security: Architecting Electoral Systems of Trust
Insight Talk
Tuesday, November 19, 2019 | 11:00 am–11:45 am
Insight Talk
Tuesday, November 19, 2019 | 11:00 am–11:45 am
Who won the election? Functional republics must answer this fundamental question. A failure to answer this question in the 2000 Presidential election led to upgrading our elections from analog paper to digital machines. A failure to answer this question in the 2016 election has led to calls to degrade our election back to an analog system.
This talk will take a nonpartisan look at the nature of security threats to our electoral system and consider what technologies will be essential to architecting electoral systems of trust.
This talk will take a nonpartisan look at the nature of security threats to our electoral system and consider what technologies will be essential to architecting electoral systems of trust.
Presenter
- Phil Stupak, Fellow, University of Chicago Harris Cyber Policy Initiative (CPI)
Phil Stupak is Fellow at the University of Chicago Harris Cyber Policy Initiative (CPI), where he works on election security policy initiatives.
Phil previously served in President Obama's Administration where he handled cybersecurity, technology research & development, national security, and international relations portfolios for the Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Before joining President Obama’s Administration, Phil served as counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on House Administration, led then-Senator Obama’s 2008 field campaign in northern Michigan, and served in the General Counsel’s office at the New York City Board of Elections. Phil has lectured on cybersecurity, homeland security, and privacy impacts of unmanned aerial vehicles. He has a BA from the University of California, Berkeley and a JD from the University of Richmond. |
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