By Rebecca Day

It’s been a distracting week to say the least. Add that to a disruptive seven months and you have the makings of a year we only wish we could forget. It used to be a presidential election came and went. You went into the booth on the same day most everyone else did, closed the drape behind you and heard a satisfying click when you pulled the lever for your candidate.

 

By Hank Schless

With the election just a week away, cybercriminals are ramping up mobile attacks on citizens under the guise of campaign communications. The line between our personal and professional lives is blurring in an unprecedented fashion as we approach the 2020 presidential election. From Oracle and Walmart’s plans to invest in TikTok to a bug in Joe Biden’s campaign app that exposed millions of voter files – the role mobile technology will play in elections moving forward is critical.