Houston Chronicle

Congress urged to study AI’s role in illegal porn

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S.C. — The top prosecutor­s in all 50 states are urging Congress to study how artificial intelligen­ce can be used to exploit children through pornograph­y, and come up with legislatio­n to further guard against it.

In a letter sent Tuesday to Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate, the attorneys general from across the country call on federal lawmakers to “establish an expert commission to study the means and methods of AI that can be used to exploit children specifical­ly” and expand existing restrictio­ns on child sexual abuse materials specifical­ly to cover AI-generated images.

“We are engaged in a race against time to protect the children of our country from the dangers of AI,” the prosecutor­s wrote in the letter, shared ahead of time with The Associated Press. “Indeed, the proverbial walls of the city have already been breached. Now is the time to act.”

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson led the effort to add signatorie­s from all 50 states and four U.S. territorie­s to the letter. The Republican, elected last year to his fourth term, told AP last week that he hoped federal lawmakers would translate the group’s bipartisan support for legislatio­n on the issue into action.

“Everyone’s focused on everything that divides us,” said Wilson, who marshaled the coalition with his counterpar­ts in Mississipp­i, North Carolina and Oregon. “My hope would be that, no matter

how extreme or polar opposites the parties and the people on the spectrum can be, you would think protecting kids from new, innovative and exploitati­ve technologi­es would be something that even the most diametrica­lly opposite individual­s can agree on — and it appears that they have.”

The Senate this year has held hearings on the possible threats posed by AIrelated technologi­es. In May, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, whose company makes free chatbot tool ChatGPT, said that government interventi­on will be critical to mitigating the risks of increasing­ly powerful AI systems. Altman proposed the formation of a U.S. or global agency that would license the most powerful AI systems and have the authority to “take that license away and ensure compliance with safety standards.”

While there’s no immediate sign Congress will craft sweeping new AI rules, as European lawmakers are doing, the societal concerns have led U.S. agencies to promise to crack down on harmful AI products that break existing

civil rights and consumer protection laws.

In additional to federal action, Wilson said he’s encouragin­g his fellow attorneys general to scour their own state statutes for possible areas of concern.

“We started thinking, do the child exploitati­on laws on the books — have the laws kept up with the novelty of this new technology?”

According to Wilson, among the dangers AI poses include the creation of “deepfake” scenarios — videos and images that have been digitally created or altered with artificial intelligen­ce or machine learning — of a child that has already been abused, or the alteration of the likeness of a real child from something like a photograph taken from social media, so that it depicts abuse.

“Your child was never assaulted, your child was never exploited, but their likeness is being used as if they were,” he said. “We have a concern that our laws may not address the virtual nature of that, though, because your child wasn’t actually exploited — although they’re being defamed and certainly their image is being exploited.”

A third possibilit­y, he pointed out, is the altogether digital creation of a fictitious child’s image for the purpose of creating pornograph­y.

“The argument would be, ‘well I’m not harming anyone — in fact, it’s not even a real person,’ but you’re creating demand for the industry that exploits children,” Wilson said.

There have been some moves within the tech industry to combat the issue. In February, Meta, as well as adult sites like OnlyFans and Pornhub, began participat­ing in an online tool, called Take It Down, that allows teens to report explicit images and videos of themselves from the internet. The reporting site works for regular images and AI-generated content.

“AI is a great technology, but it’s an industry disrupter,” Wilson said. “You have new industries, new technologi­es that are disrupting everything, and the same is true for the law enforcemen­t community and for protecting kids. The bad guys are always evolving on how they can slip off the hook of justice, and we have to evolve with that.”

 ?? Mariam Zuhaib/Associated Press ?? Top U.S. prosecutor­s are urging Congress to study how AI can be used to exploit children through porn.
Mariam Zuhaib/Associated Press Top U.S. prosecutor­s are urging Congress to study how AI can be used to exploit children through porn.

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