Records show you voted, the mysterious messages read.
The message included a link to a legitimate state government website with polling information.
However, the campaign was actually the work of an organization called AllVote, the Inquirer reports.
© Kena Betancur / AFP
On Tuesday, a Texas news outletreported thatsimilar texts had popped up in Dallas County.
Weirdly, in that case, the text messages seem to have been telling voters whohadvoted that they hadnt.
We did as we were supposed to do.
We came out, turned our phone on and immediately received that text, a voter told the outlet.
It said someone in your house with my address on my personal cell phone may not have voted.
The messages encouraged them to submit personal information to its website, AllVote.com.
We need everyone to be aware and protect their personal data.
AllVote attributed voter confusion to an error that was included in a message.
In the heat of the campaign season, workers working long hours simply made a copy editing mistake.
The in 2022 was left out of the script, the AllVote representative said.
The best course of action is to stick with official information from state websites and ignore everything else.
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