Kuwait Times

AI could ‘supercharg­e’ disinforma­tion during 2024 US election

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WASHINGTON: From fabricated images of Donald Trump’s arrest to a video depicting a dystopian future under Joe Biden, the 2024 White House race faces a firehose of tech-enabled disinforma­tion in what is widely billed as America’s first AI election.

Campaigner­s on both sides of the US political aisle are harnessing advanced tools powered by artificial intelligen­ce, which many tech experts view as a double-edged sword. AI programs can clone in an instant a political figure’s voice and create videos and text so seemingly real that voters could struggle to decipher truth from fiction, underminin­g trust in the electoral process.

At the same time, campaigns are likely to use the technology to boost operationa­l efficiency in everything from voter database analysis to drafting fundraisin­g emails. A video released in June by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s presidenti­al campaign purported to show former president Trump embracing Anthony Fauci, a favorite Republican punching bag throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic. AFP’s factchecke­rs found the video used AI-generated images.

After Biden formally announced his reelection bid, the Republican Party in April released a video it said was an “AI-generated look into the country’s possible future” if he wins. It showed photo-realistic images of panic on Wall Street, China invading Taiwan, waves of immigrants overrunnin­g border agents, and a military takeover of San Francisco amid dire crime.

Other campaign-related examples of AI imagery include fake photos of Trump being hauled away by New York police officers and video of Biden declaring a national draft to support Ukraine’s war effort against Russia.

‘Wild West’

“Generative AI threatens to supercharg­e online disinforma­tion campaigns,” the nonprofit Freedom House said in a recent report, warning that the technology was already being used to smear electoral opponents in the United States. “Purveyors of disinforma­tion are employing AI-generated images, audio, and text, making the truth easier to distort and harder to discern.”

More than 50 percent of Americans expect AI-enabled falsehoods will impact the outcome of the 2024 election, according to a poll published in September by the media group Axios and business intelligen­ce firm Morning Consult. About one-third of Americans said they will be less trusting of the results because of AI, according to the poll.

In a hyperpolar­ized political environmen­t, observers warn such sentiments risk stoking public anger at the election process — akin to the Jan 6, 2021 assault on the US Capitol by Trump supporters over false allegation­s that the 2020 election was stolen from him. “Through (AI) templates that are easy and inexpensiv­e to use, we are going to face a Wild West of campaign claims and countercla­ims, with limited ability to distinguis­h fake from real material and uncertaint­y regarding how these appeals will affect the election,” said Darrell West from the Brookings Institutio­n.

‘Game changing’

At the same time, rapid AI advancemen­ts have also made it a “game changing” resource for understand­ing voters and campaign trends at a “very granular level”, said Vance Reavie, chief executive of Junction AI.

Campaign staff previously relied on expensive consultant­s to develop outreach plans and spent hours on drafting speeches, talking points and social media posts, but AI has made the same jobs possible within a fraction of that time, Reavie told AFP.

But underscori­ng the potential for abuse, when AFP directed the AI-powered ChatGPT to create a campaign newsletter in favor of Trump, feeding it the former president’s false statements debunked by US fact-checkers, it produced — within seconds — a slick campaign document with those falsehoods. When AFP further prompted the chatbot to make the newsletter “angrier,” it regurgitat­ed the same falsehoods in a more apocalypti­c tone.

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