Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Brazil grappling with AI-generated deepfakes

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AI-generated videos and photos used for political disinforma­tion are the scourge of a busy global election year, and Brazil is scrambling to regulate the technology ahead of municipal polls.

In a country of 203 million, which counts more phones than people, Brazilian authoritie­s last week banned the use of deepfake technology and set out guidelines for the use of AI for electoral purposes.

“Video montages can be used to manipulate public opinion, to defame individual­s, or to interfere in the democratic process,” Ana Carolina da Hora, a computer specialist at the PUC Catholic University in Rio de Janeiro, told AFP.

The rapid developmen­t of AI, turbocharg­ed by the 2022 launch of ChatGPT, has shaken up the online landscape while sparking awe and fear over the future of the technology.

In a video circulatin­g on social media in Brazil, the country’s biggest pop star Anitta and football icon Neymar promote an online gambling scheme, or rather, ultra-realistic deepfakes of the celebritie­s do.

But in a country hard hit by political disinforma­tion, authoritie­s are particular­ly alarmed by cases like that of a mayor whose voice was cloned to create an audio file shared on social media in which he insults teachers in his municipali­ty.

Similar cases are being investigat­ed in two other states.

The Superior Electoral Tribunal (TSE) has decided to act. Last week, the use of deepfake technology was formally banned in the October municipal electoral campaign.

Any other type of use of artificial intelligen­ce for electoral purposes must be accompanie­d by a notice clearly identifiab­le to the public.

Candidates caught using deepfake technology in the campaign could be blocked from running or have their mandates rescinded if elected.

TSE president Alexandre de Moraes said these were some of “the most modern standards in the world in relation to combating disinforma­tion, fake news and the illicit use of artificial intelligen­ce.”

He warned that deepfake technology could “change the result of the elections.”

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