The Philippine Star

Deepfakes in the 2025 polls

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In the 2022 general elections, advocates for clean and honest polls lamented the widespread use of digital technology for spreading misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion to influence the vote.

Since that electoral exercise, digital technology has continued to advance at dizzying speed, giving the world artificial intelligen­ce that has worried even the top tech entreprene­urs. AI has facilitate­d the creation of deepfakes, which are now being used in content creation for online fraud. In recent weeks, cyber sleuths in the Philippine­s have warned the public about the increasing use of deepfakes utilizing prominent personalit­ies to endorse products and carry out a wide range of scams.

As worrisome as these fraudulent money-making schemes is the possible use of deepfakes to influence the outcome of the upcoming midterm elections next year. This warning was issued by the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, which has admitted an acute lack of manpower to detect and neutralize hackers and digital fraudsters.

The Commission on Elections has been trying to keep up with technology that may affect voting outcome. But the Comelec itself has yet to fully address concerns raised by a group of cyber security experts over the poll body’s use of a single private internet protocol or IP address for the unusually rapid transmissi­on of a massive number of votes in the 2022 presidenti­al race.

Election watchdog groups worked with cyber security agencies and experts to try to curb the spread of disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion in the 2022 polls. With the increasing sophistica­tion of AI technology, the task has become more challengin­g, even with the combined resources of the government and the private sector. With just over a year before the midterm elections, an aggressive effort is needed to protect the vote from deepfakes and other forms of digital chicanery.

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