Conspiracy theories about mail ballots. Anonymous text messages warning voters to stay home. Fringe social media platforms where election misinformation spreads with impunity.

Misinformation about the upcoming midterm elections has been building for months, challenging and while offering another reminder of how conspiracy theories and distrust are .

The claims are fueling the candidacies of election deniers and threatening to further corrode faith in voting and democracy. Many of them can be traced back to 2020, when then-President Donald the outcome of the election he lost to Joe Biden and began lying about its results.

鈥淢isinformation is going to be central to this midterm election and central to the 2024 election,鈥 said Bhaskar Chakravorti, who studies technological change and society and is the dean of global business at the Fletcher School at Tufts University. 鈥淭he single galvanizing narrative is that the 2020 election was stolen.鈥

A look at key misinformation challenges heading into the 2022 election:

MISLEADING CLAIMS ABOUT VOTING

Political misinformation often focuses on , , , , disasters, or . This year, it's mostly about voting.

Claims about the have grown in recent weeks, as have baseless rumors about . That's in addition to claims about casting ballots, ballot drop boxes being moved or .

Trump, a Republican, attacked the legitimacy of the election even before he lost. He then refused to concede, that inspired on the U.S. Capitol. His contention was rejected in more than 60 court cases and by his own attorney general, William Barr.

Together, these misleading claims about the nation鈥檚 electoral system have led some Republicans to say they're going to 鈥 a move that could slow down the count.

Others vow to monitor the polls to prevent cheating, leading to concerns about intimidation and even the possibility of violence at election sites.

Tech companies say they've implemented new policies and programs designed to ferret out misinformation.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen hundreds of elections play out on our platforms in recent years and we鈥檝e been applying lessons from each one to strengthen our preparations,鈥 Facebook and Instagram owner Meta said in a statement.

Yet critics say the volume of false claims spreading now shows there's more to be done, such as better enforcement of existing rules or government regulations requiring more aggressive policies.

鈥淭his is no longer a new problem," said Jon Lloyd, senior adviser at the nonprofit Global Witness, which last week released showing that TikTok failed to remove many advertisements that contain election misinformation. Big social media platforms, he said, "are still simply not doing enough to stop threats to democracy.鈥

MISTAKES WILL HAPPEN 鈥 WHILE CLOCK IS TICKING

Elections involve the combined efforts of tens of thousands of people working under pressure. Mistakes are expected, which is why there's a robust system of checks and balances to ensure errors are found and corrected.

Taken out of context, stories about glitchy voting machines, or even 鈥渟uspicious鈥 vehicles arriving at election centers can become fodder for the next election fraud myth.

And with so much work to do at such a fast pace, election workers, local officials and even the media can have little time to push back on such claims before they go viral.

In Georgia in 2020, at a site where ballots were being counted was used to spin a far-fetched tale of ballot rigging. In Arizona, given to voters filling out ballots led to similarly preposterous claims.

To avoid falling for a misleading claim, consult multiple sources including local election offices. Any significant voting irregularity will be covered by multiple news outlets and addressed by election officials. Be skeptical of claims from second-hand sources, said Shaye-Ann McDonald, a behavioral researcher at Duke University who studies ways to improve resistance to misinformation.

The most viral misinformation often elicits anger or fear that motivates readers to repost it before they've had time to coolly consider the underlying claim.

鈥淲hen you read about something that provokes a strong emotion, that should be a warning sign,鈥 McDonald said.

A MULTILINGUAL CHALLENGE

Just before the 2020 election, Spanish-language Facebook ads falsely claimed Biden, a Democrat, was a communist. On other platforms, posts warned Latinos in the U.S. not to vote at all.

is a particular concern cited by researchers who say the major platforms 鈥 most of them U.S.-based 鈥 are focused on content moderation in English. Automated systems written to detect misinformation in English don't work as well when applied to other languages.

鈥淎s bad as they (tech companies) are moderating content in English, they鈥檙e even worse when it comes non-English languages,鈥 said Jessica Gonzalez, co-CEO of Free Press, a nonprofit that works on issues of racial justice and technology.

MISINFORMATION BY TEXT?

While misinformation about elections spreads easily on big social media platforms like Facebook, it also has taken root on a long list of less familiar platforms: Gab, Gettr, Parler and Truth Social, Trump鈥檚 platform.

Meanwhile, TikTok has emerged as 鈥 and the politicians who want to reach them. The platform, owned by a Chinese company called ByteDance, has created an election center to connect users with trustworthy information about elections and voting. But nonetheless .

The problem isn鈥檛 limited to social media. The number of false claims transmitted by text and email has steadily increased in recent years. Last summer, Democratic telling them a yes vote on an upcoming referendum would protect abortion rights; the opposite was true.

MUSK AND TWITTER

Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter just weeks before the 2022 election upended that platform's plans for combating misinformation ahead of the midterms.

Musk quickly fired the executive who had overseen content moderation. Over the weekend he posted a tweet advancing a baseless conspiracy theory about the attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, before deleting it.

Musk has called himself a free speech absolutist and had said he disagreed with the decision to boot Trump from the platform for incitement of violence on Jan. 6, 2021.

He has said that will examine possible revisions to Twitter's rules but that no changes would be made until after the election.

鈥淲e鈥檙e staying vigilant against attempts to manipulate conversations about the 2022 US midterms.鈥 Yoel Roth, Twitter's head of safety and integrity, tweeted Tuesday.

THREATS FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC

Russian efforts to interfere in U.S. elections go back years, and there are indications that China and Iran are stepping up their game.

Tech companies, government officials and misinformation researchers say they're ahead of the midterms. But the may be far greater.

____

Follow the AP鈥檚 coverage of misinformation at . Follow the AP for full coverage of the 2022 midterm elections at and on Twitter at . And check out to learn more about the issues and factors at play in the midterms.

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