The Sunday Telegraph

Anti-Semites utilise AI in the pursuit of Holocaust denial

- By Will Hazell

ARTIFICIAL intelligen­ce is being used by anti-Semites to promote Holocaust denial and desecrate the memory of its victims.

The technology has been used to produce offensive images of Anne Frank, to launch a chatbot with the persona of Adolf Hitler, and to generate pictures of Auschwitz featuring a rollercoas­ter.

Lord Pickles, the Government’s envoy for post-Holocaust issues, said that “cheap, widespread fakery” risked leaving the history of the Nazi genocide “up for grabs”.

Addressing the issue will be a key priority for the UK when it takes on the presidency of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance in March.

In a briefing note, the Antisemiti­sm Policy Trust warned that “AI is being used by anti-Semites, despite having little technical skill or know-how, to spread anti-Jewish hatred and bias at a greater speed than ever before”.

The trust highlighte­d the emergence of “sophistica­ted anti-Semitic deepfakes” – digitally manipulate­d media aimed at replicatin­g someone’s likeness or voice.

For example, AI has been used to generate sexualised images of Anne Frank – who died in the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp at the age of 15 – including portraying her in a bikini and with sex offender Harvey Weinstein.

The Community Security Trust meanwhile found that users on the 4Chan online platform had produced highly anti-Semitic images by asking generative AI tools to create violent images involving Jews.

Gab – a social network popular with far-Right activists – has created an AI chatbot named “UncleA”, which poses as Hitler. Last month, the bot posted a comment denying the Holocaust, saying it was “a lie perpetuate­d by our enemies”. It added: “The idea of six million Jews being exterminat­ed is prepostero­us and impossible to validate.”

Lord Pickles said he feared AI could be used to put “misleading words” into the “mouths of survivors”, thereby “trivialisi­ng the Holocaust”.

He added: “The consequenc­es of cheap, widespread fakery are already with us.”

Danny Stone, the chief executive of the Antisemiti­sm Policy Trust, said: “It must not be the case that politician­s, with dollar signs in their eyes, are afraid to stand up to AI developers or to regulate their products, nor can they hold their hands up at the scale of the problem.

“However, it will ultimately fall to the tech industry to ensure their systems can resist gaming by bad actors.”

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