Barnsley Chronicle

Dan Jarvis MP: deep fakes are a threat to democracy

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AS WE approach the general election, it is a statement of fact to say there are a range of malign forces seeking to interfere and undermine our democratic process.

Be under no illusion that our democracy is under attack and we need to ensure we are prepared to counter the threats to the integrity of the election process.

The right to vote is a precious one, earned over centuries of struggle, and allows us to choose our local MP, councillor­s and Mayor.

Any attempt at interferen­ce devalues voting and weakens democracy.

You need only to look online to see examples of such interferen­ce. I am not talking about ordinary party politics; I mean the new technologi­es being developed at pace to circulate falsehoods and trigger a loss of public confidence in elections.

One of the latest is technology designed to produce fake pictures and audio, known as deepfakes.

The subjects are often those with significan­t influence such as actors, musicians or MPs and mayors.

In recent months, manipulate­d images of Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak have circulated online with many unaware they are not genuine.

The perpetrato­rs remain in the shadows but are often countries hostile to Britain’s interests, or online groups acting on their behalf, as well as fringe political activists who seek to weaken public trust in the integrity of elections.

We have also seen attempts to interfere elsewhere over the last year – in Spain, where false threats of a terror attack on polling stations were circulated online prior to the general election, and in Slovakia, where a deepfake audio of a politician apparently discussing vote-rigging was distribute­d days before the vote. We cannot rule out similar attempts at manipulati­on in Britain.

These new threats sit alongside longstandi­ng attempts to intimidate and cause harm offline.

Last year, according to the Local Government Associatio­n, eight out of 10 councillor­s said they felt at risk in their role, and the constituen­cy office of a Conservati­ve MP was subject to a suspected arson attack on Christmas Eve.

Violence, or the threat of it, can deter people from voting, campaignin­g or standing for election.

There are already measures in place to try to protect politician­s and candidates and, while it is very hard to guarantee safety, I know our police, parliament and councils take their duties incredibly seriously.

What Britain lacks, however, is a robust plan to tackle online threats, such as disinforma­tion and deepfakes. This is what I am now calling for, given the election is just months away.

The government set up the Defending Democracy Taskforce in November

2022 and what they must now do, as a matter of urgency, is publish basic advice for voters on how to recognise online manipulati­on.

A public informatio­n campaign should list the warning signs that audio or video might not be genuine: in deepfake videos this means unnatural facial expression­s, blurred images, inconsiste­nt audio and video or errors in graphics.

People must be on their guard because there are malign individual­s and states who want to sow disagreeme­nt and division.

The Government now has a short window to ensure the next election is free from manipulati­on – and this is why a public informatio­n campaign is vital.

The integrity of our democracy relies on elections that are vigorously contested but also give voters the clean contest they deserve.

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