New information and communication technologies (ICTs) pose difficult challenges for electoral integrity. In recent years foreign governments have used social media and the Internet to interfere in elections around the globe. Disinformation has been weaponized to discredit democratic institutions, sow societal distrust, and attack political candidates. Social media has proved a useful tool for extremist groups to send messages of hate and to incite violence. Democratic governments strain to respond to a revolution in political advertising brought about by ICTs. Electoral integrity has been at risk from attacks on the electoral process, and on the quality of democratic deliberation. The relationship between the Internet, social media, elections, and democracy is complex, systemic, and unfolding. Our ability to assess some of the most important claims about social media is constrained by the unwillingness of the major platforms to share data with researchers. Nonetheless, we are confident about several important findings.

Stanford MIP Graduation 2025 | Student Remarks by Tyler Smith
25 views

Stanford MIP Graduation 2026 | Remarks by Jerry Kaplan
58 views

Building AI Beyond the Data Center
87 views

The Evolution of Warfare: Perspectives from the Front Line
136 views

Defense Innovation at Speed: DIU and the Future of Warfare with Owen West
130 views

Investing in National Security: VCs Funding the Future of Defense
66 views