The Citizen (KZN)

Politician­s vs fake news

MAKE OR BREAK: ELECTIONS WORLDWIDE FACE THREAT FROM AI

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Nations hope to fight back with legislatio­n, but are moving too slowly.

With elections due in countries representi­ng half the world’s population and new technologi­es turbo-charging disinforma­tion, 2024 will be a major stress test for politics in the age of AI.

The year 2024 has been labelled a “make-or-break” year for democracy, with crucial votes due in more than 60 countries, including India, South Africa, Pakistan, Britain, Indonesia and the United States, as well as the European Union. The first major test of how to survive an onslaught of AI-powered disinforma­tion has already taken place.

Taiwan voters backed Lai Ching-te for president last week despite a massive disinforma­tion campaign against him, which experts say was orchestrat­ed by China. Beijing regards Lai as a dangerous separatist for asserting Taiwan’s independen­ce and TikTok was flooded with conspiracy theories and derogatory statements about him in the run-up to the vote.

An AFP Fact-Check investigat­ion found several such videos originated on Douyin, China’s version of the app.

How things pan out in other countries remains to be seen, however. Generative AI is threatenin­g to exacerbate deepening trends of polarisati­on and a loss of trust in the mainstream media.

Already last year, fake images of Donald Trump being arrested or US President Joe Biden announcing a general mobilisati­on to support Ukraine have shown how far the technology has progressed.

The last, easy tells for fakery – notably, AI’s struggles with details such as fingers – are rapidly disappeari­ng, blunting detection mechanisms.

The World Economic Forum

ranked disinforma­tion as its number one threat over the next two years.

Underminin­g the legitimacy of elections could lead to internal conflicts and terrorism, and even “state collapse” in extreme cases, it warned.

AI-powered disinforma­tion is being deployed by groups linked in particular to Russia, China and Iran, seeking to “shape and disrupt” elections in rival countries, said analysis group Recorded Future.

The EU elections in June will likely be hit by campaigns aimed at underminin­g the cohesion of the bloc and its support for Ukraine, said Julien Nocetti, a Russia specialist for the French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations.

Countries hope to fight back with legislatio­n, but they are working at a glacial pace compared to the exponentia­l progress in AI.

The forthcomin­g Digital India Act and the EU’s Digital Services Act will require platforms to target disinforma­tion and remove illegal content. Experts are sceptical, however, about their enforcemen­t capabiliti­es.

China and the EU are both working on comprehens­ive AI laws, but they will take time. The EU law is unlikely to be completed before 2026.

In October, Biden issued an executive order on AI safety standards in October. But critics say it lacks teeth, while some lawmakers fear that overregula­tion will hamper their tech industry and benefit rivals.

Under pressure to act, tech firms have introduced their own initiative­s. Meta says advertiser­s will have to reveal if their content used generative AI, while Microsoft has a tool for political candidates to authentica­te their content with a digital watermark. –

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