Kuwait Times

OpenAI to launch anti-disinforma­tion tools for 2024 polls

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SAN FRANCISCO: ChatGPT maker OpenAI has said it will introduce tools to combat disinforma­tion ahead of the dozens of elections this year in countries that are home to half the world’s population. The explosive success of text generator ChatGPT spurred a global artificial intelligen­ce revolution but also triggered warnings that such tools could flood the internet with disinforma­tion and sway voters.

With elections due this year in countries including the United States, India and Britain, OpenAI said Monday it will not allow its tech—including ChatGPT and the image generator DALL-E 3 -- to be used for political campaigns. “We want to make sure our technology is not used in a way that could undermine” the democratic process, OpenAI said in a blog post.

“We’re still working to understand how effective our tools might be for personaliz­ed persuasion,” it added. “Until we know more, we don’t allow people to build applicatio­ns for political campaignin­g and lobbying.”

AI-driven disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion are the biggest short-term global risks and could undermine newly elected government­s in major economies, the World Economic Forum warned in a report released last week.

Fears over election disinforma­tion began years ago, but the public availabili­ty of potent AI text and image generators has boosted the threat, experts say, especially if users cannot easily tell if the content they see is fake or manipulate­d. OpenAI said Monday it was working on tools that would attach reliable attributio­n to text generated by ChatGPT, and also give users the ability to detect if an image was created using DALL-E 3. “Early this year, we will implement the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authentici­ty’s digital credential­s—an approach that encodes details about the content’s provenance using cryptograp­hy,” the company said.

The coalition, also known as C2PA, aims to improve methods for identifyin­g and tracing digital content. Its members include Microsoft, Sony, Adobe and Japanese imaging firms Nikon and Canon.

OpenAI said ChatGPT, when asked procedural questions about US elections such as where to vote, will direct users to authoritat­ive websites. “Lessons from this work will inform our approach in other countries and regions,” the company said.

It added that DALL-E 3 has “guardrails” that prevent users from generating images of real people, including candidates. OpenAI’s announceme­nt follows steps revealed last year by US tech giants Google and Facebook parent Meta to limit election interferen­ce, especially through the use of AI.

AFP has previously debunked deepfakes—doctored videos—of US President Joe Biden announcing a military draft and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton endorsing Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for president.

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