The United States government will pay up to $10 million for information on nation state hackers and cyber saboteurs that threaten or interfere in the upcoming local and federal elections this year.
Under the existing Rewards for Justice programmer, set up in 1984 and administered by the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service, the US government is now offering rewards for anyone who can supply information leading to the identification or location of people who work with or for foreign governments and are involved in illegal cyber activities for election interference.
Overseas government actors have been accused of interference in the US elections since 2016, when Donald Trump won the presidency. Russian diplomats were expelled in 2016 by order of then president Barack Obama for hacking US political groups, and for election interference.
The issue has been a major concern since then, especially since the US is embracing e-voting with internet-connected machines that security experts say are vulnerable to hacking.