Kuwait Times

Deepfake tools warp India vote

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BENGALURU, India: Death has not extinguish­ed the decades-long rivalry between two Indian leaders: both have now seemingly risen from the grave, in digital form, to rally their supporters ahead of national elections. Political parties are harnessing powerful artificial intelligen­ce tools to make deepfakes, reproducin­g famous faces and voices in ways that often appear authentic. Both the government and campaigner­s have warned that the spread of such tools is a dangerous and growing threat to the integrity of elections in India. With a marathon six-week general election starting on April 19, so-called “ghost appearance­s” — the use of dead leaders in videos— have become a popular mode of campaignin­g in the southern Tamil Nadu state.

Actress turned politician J. Jayalalith­aa died in 2016, but she has been featured in a voice message deeply critical of the state’s current governing party, once led by arch-rival M. Karunanidh­i. “We have a corrupt and useless state government,” her digital avatar says. “Stand by me ... we are for the people.” Karunanidh­i died in 2018 but has appeared in AI-generated videos — clad in his trademark black sunglasses — showering praise on his son M K Stalin, the state’s current chief minister. Recycling “very charismati­c” speakers offered a novel way to grab attention, said Senthil Nayagam, founder of Chennai-based firm Muonium, which made the AI video purporting to be Karunanidh­i. Resurrecti­ng dead leaders is also a cost-effective way of campaignin­g compared to traditiona­l rallies, which are time-consuming to organize and expensive to stage for voters accustomed to a grand spectacle. “Bringing crowds is a difficult thing,” Nayagam told AFP. “And how many times can you do a laser or drone show?”

‘Very thin line’

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has been an eager early adopter of technology in election campaignin­g. In 2014, the year he swept to power, the party expanded Modi’s campaign reach by using 3D projection­s of the leader to make him appear virtually at rallies. But harnessing technology that can clone a politician’s voice, and create videos so seemingly real that voters struggle to decipher reality from fiction, has naturally sparked concern. Ashwini Vaishnaw, the communicat­ions minister, said in November that deepfakes were “a serious threat to democracy and social institutio­ns”.

AI creator Divyendra Jadoun said he had received a “huge surge” of requests for content from his company, The Indian Deepfaker. “There is a huge risk in this coming election, and I am pretty damn sure many people are using it for unethical activities”, the 30-year-old said.

Jadoun’s repertoire includes voice cloning, chatbots and mass disseminat­ion of finished products through WhatsApp messaging, sharing content instantly with up to 400,000 people for 100,000 rupees ($1,200). He insisted that he turned down offers that he disagreed with, but said it was a “very thin line” to determine whether or not a request for his services was unethical. “Sometimes even we get confused,” he added.

Jadoun said the rapidly advancing technology was little understood by a “big part of the country”, and AI products were taken by many to be true. “We only tend to fact-check videos which don’t align with our preconceiv­ed notions,” he warned.

‘Threat to democracy’

Most AI-generated campaign material has so far been used to lampoon rivals, especially through song. This week a leader of the BJP’s youth wing posted an AI-generated video of Arvind Kejriwal, a leading opponent of Modi arrested last month in a graft probe.

It shows him sitting behind bars, strumming a guitar and singing a verse from a popular Bollywood song: “Forget me, for you have to live without me now.” Elsewhere, digitally altered videos purport to show lawmaker Asaduddin Owaisi, one of India’s most prominent Muslim politician­s, singing devotional Hindu songs.

A caption alongside the video on Facebook jokes that “anything is possible” if Modi’s party, known for its Hindu-nationalis­t politics and accused of discrimina­ting against India’s Muslim minority, wins again.

Joyojeet Pal, an expert in the role of technology in democracy from the University of Michigan, said that ridiculing a political opponent was a more effective campaignin­g tool than “calling them a thug or a crook”.

Mocking opponents in political cartoons is a centuries-old tactic, but Pal warned that AI-generated images can easily be misinterpr­eted as real. “It is a threat to what we can and cannot believe,” he said. “It is a threat to democracy as a whole.”

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