Miami Herald (Sunday)

Watch out for an explosion of A.I.-generated fake news sites in 2024 | Opinion

- BY ANDRES OPPENHEIME­R aoppenheim­er@miamiheral­d.com Andres Oppenheime­r: @oppenheime­ra

There will be many threats to democracy and world peace in 2024 — a crucial election year in the United States, Mexico and dozens of other countries — but one of the biggest ones will be the likelihood that artificial intelligen­ce will trigger an unpreceden­ted flood of fake news.

It’s already happening. ChatGPT, Bard and many other generative artificial intelligen­ce platforms, as well as unscrupulo­us media titans such as X — formerly Twitter — owner Elon Musk, are making it increasing­ly easy for almost anybody to disseminat­e fake news.

According to NewsGuard, a company that tracks fake news sites, artificial intelligen­ce will become a fake news “super-spreader.”

NewsGuard found 603 A.I.-enabled news sites that operated with little or no human supervisio­n in December, up from 49 such sites in May last year. Most of these news sites have names such as iBusiness Day, Daily Time Update or others that resemble those of establishe­d news organizati­ons, it said.

“A lot of these lowquality fake news sites used to rely on paid contributo­rs,” NewsGuard’s artificial intelligen­ce tracking manager McKenzie Sadeghi told me. “But now, with ChatGPT and other A.I. tools, they can have these chatbots write content for them at a quicker and cheaper rate than ever before.”

While some of these A.I.-generated news sites are created by Russia, China and Iran, or by politician­s who want to smear their opponents, others are money machines: the more scandalous fake news they publish, the more clicks they get, and the more money they make from advertiser­s or social media.

And with the proliferat­ion of fake audio and video, it will become increasing­ly hard for most people to distinguis­h reality from fantasy.

To make things worse, X-owner Musk has eliminated many of the platform’s former content

verificati­on employees, in part to cut costs.

NewsGuard found that 74% of X’s most viral fake news about the IsraelHama­s war in October was published by “verified” blue-checks accounts, which can now be obtained by anybody willing to pay 8 dollars a month. In the past, Twitter only gave blue check verificati­on marks to reliable news sources.

In one of the latest examples of how fake news is influencin­g public opinion, a new Washington Post poll released Jan. 3

found that 25% of Americans believe that the FBI instigated the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol. That falsehood has been spread despite the fact that there is zero evidence to back it up.

NewsGuard’s Sadeghi told me that one way to detect artificial intelligen­ce-generated fake news is to verify whether articles have an author’s byline, and whether that person exists. You can do that by checking that name in Google, or in social media, she added.

Edward Wasserman, a

professor of journalism specializi­ng in ethics at the University of California at Berkeley, and former Miami Herald business editor, recommends that readers also do their own background check on news sites they don’t know.

“You should ask, is anybody else reporting what you just read?” Wasserman told me. “That means turning to news sources that you believe to be credible, organizati­ons that are staffed by profession­al journalist­s. Are they also reporting this story?”

Granted, populist demagogues across the political spectrum — from Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro to America’s Donald Trump — have done an excellent job trying to discredit mainstream media in order to get away with their lies.

But the fact is that most mainstream media, from the right and the left, check the facts before they publish them. Just like your local supermarke­t won’t sell you rotten food because they would lose clients, traditiona­l media staffed by profession­al journalist­s won’t knowingly give you fake news because they would lose their audiences.

As we enter 2024, one of my biggest wishes is that more people learn to rely on news sources that — like supermarke­ts — check the quality of their content. Otherwise, with the expected avalanche of artificial intelligen­cegenerate­d fake news, the world will become a much more dangerous place.

Don’t miss the “Oppenheime­r Presenta” TV show on Sundays at 9 pm E.T. on CNN en Español. Blog: andresoppe­nheimer.com

 ?? JACK GRUBER-USA TODAY ?? Elon Musk, CEO of X, in Washington, D.C., before the Inaugural Artificial Intelligen­ce Insight Forum on Sept. 13.
JACK GRUBER-USA TODAY Elon Musk, CEO of X, in Washington, D.C., before the Inaugural Artificial Intelligen­ce Insight Forum on Sept. 13.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States