Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Tampa Bay Times on how Desantis’ embrace of deepfake videos will come back to bite him:

-

Ron Desantis’ presidenti­al campaign clearly considers voters to be fools, or at least deserving of being treated as such. How else to explain the campaign’s eager dive earlier this month into the technologi­cal sewer of “deepfakes”?

As part of a campaign video attacking former President Donald Trump, the Florida governor’s election staff posted three images on Twitter of Trump embracing Anthony Fauci, a much-reviled figure on the right because of his work during the COVID pandemic. Experts say the images are almost certainly fakes, creations of artificial intelligen­ce.

Desantis’ willingnes­s to open this Pandora’s box of deception for the 2024 presidenti­al race has disturbing implicatio­ns for voters, who will need to pay even closer attention than usual to what candidates tell or show them. Many politician­s are willing to deceive. Desantis just proved it with the phony images. But artificial intelligen­ce is a powerful new tool for misinforma­tion, and while most deepfakes still aren’t perfect, the technology is quickly improving.

That is very bad news for democracy.

Deepfakes, according to the U.S. government, are video, photo or audio recordings that seem real but have been manipulate­d by artificial intelligen­ce, also known as AI. AI programs can change faces, alter expression­s and synthesize speech. They are most commonly used to make it look like people are saying or doing something they never did. Does anyone else see a problem here?

The phony images are put together by artificial neural networks, computer systems that recognize patterns in data. If you feed neural networks enough images, they can be trained to recognize and reconstruc­t patterns — most often faces.

The U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office says much deepfake content online is pornograph­ic and victimizes women. But experts worry it can and will be used to influence elections or incite civil unrest.

“This is the big informatio­n security problem of the 21st century,” Matthew Stamm, a Drexel University professor of electrical and computer engineerin­g, told The New York Times after reviewing the images of Fauci.

Henry Farid, a University of California professor, told the Times such tactics will proliferat­e.

“We will continue to see campaigns, state-sponsored actors, trolls and people who want to sow chaos use these fake images to drive their own agendas,” said Farid, who noted that technology experts are starting to systematic­ally review campaign materials in search of deepfakes.

Good for them, and for us. If left unchecked, deepfakes are likely to make voters even more cynical about elections, if that’s possible.

They can no longer believe video, which used to be the gold standard for accuracy. And politician­s can just cry “fake” even when the video is real, throwing the very concept of objective truth into doubt.

In a bit of irony, the Times reports that even MAGA Republican­s — most of whom despise Fauci — are upset about the use of fake images in the Desantis ad, though most, it should be noted, spent more time defending the ad’s target than denouncing the tactic . ...

Officials with the Desantis campaign are defending their use of phony images by claiming they were obvious fakes, and no different than clearly photoshopp­ed memes of Desantis circulated by Trump and his allies. Experts strongly disagree.

One thing is clear: It was the Desantis campaign that broke the deepfake taboo. The governor should probably assume that what goes around will be coming around soon — and is likely to slap him in the face.

A few months ago, Desantis was the target of rumors that he was seen eating chocolate pudding with his fingers (We are not making this up). A Trump-backed group then produced an ad hitting Desantis for “sticking his fingers where they don’t belong,” citing his vote when he was in Congress in favor of privatizin­g Social Security and raising the retirement age. The ad included video of a man digging his fingers into a plastic cup of chocolate pudding and eating it.

The man did not resemble Desantis. This time. Welcome to your brave new world, Governor Desantis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States