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Indiana officials have been preparing for a secure 2024 election. Here’s what they did.
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Indiana counties are finally getting money from the state to add a critical election security measure to their electronic voting machines.
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Indiana counties that use electronic voting machines are finally getting enough money from the state to equip all those machines with paper backup systems.
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A proposal for improving Indiana's election security by adding small printers to thousands of electronic touch-screen voting machines is being criticized by voting rights groups as relying on ineffective and outdated technology.
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Indiana will no longer move up the deadline for counties to install a vital election security measure on their voting machines.
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More than half of the voting machines Hoosiers are using in this year's election don't have a paper backup -- making them more vulnerable to irreversible errors and breaches.
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FBI officials in Indianapolis say foreign influence will be an important focus of election security this year, but they'll also investigate other election crimes, like voter manipulation and data breaches.
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Two recent studies one by Pew Research, the other from Harvard put Indiana in the bottom half of states for election integrity.
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Secretary of State Connie Lawson says a private cybersecurity firm will monitor attempts to infiltrate state voter databases scans, she says, that happen all the time.
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The General Assembly appropriated $10 million in the new state budget for election security, which will pay to add paper trails to just 10 percent of the machines that need them by next year.