The Denver Post

Is it real or made by AI?

EU wants a label as it fights disinforma­tion

- By Kelvin Chan

The European Union is pushing online platforms like Google and Meta to step up the fight against false informatio­n by adding labels to text, photos and other content generated by artificial intelligen­ce, a top official said Monday.

EU Commission Vice President Vera Jourova said the ability of a new generation of AI chatbots to create complex content and visuals in seconds raises “fresh challenges for the fight against disinforma­tion.”

She said she asked Google, Meta, Microsoft, Tiktok and other tech companies that have signed up to the 27-nation bloc’s voluntary agreement on combating disinforma­tion to work to tackle the AI problem.

Online platforms that have integrated generative AI into their services, such as Microsoft’s Bing search engine and Google’s Bard chatbot, should build safeguards to prevent “malicious actors” from generating disinforma­tion, Jourova said at a briefing in Brussels.

Companies offering services that have the potential to spread AI- generated disinforma­tion should roll out technology to “recognize such content and clearly label this to users,” she said.

Google, Microsoft, Meta and Tiktok did not respond immediatel­y to requests for comment.

Jourova said EU regulation­s are aimed at protecting free speech, but when it comes to AI, “I don’t see any right for the machines to have the freedom of speech.”

The swift rise of generative AI technology, which has the capability to produce human-like text, images and video, has amazed many and alarmed others with its potential to transform many aspects of daily life.

Europe has taken a lead role in the global movement to regulate artificial intelligen­ce with its AI Act, but the legislatio­n still needs final approval and won’t take effect for several years.

Officials in the EU, which also is bringing in a separate set of rules this year to safeguard people from harmful online content, are worried that they need to act faster to keep up with the rapid developmen­t of generative AI.

Recent examples of debunked deepfakes include a realistic picture of Pope Francis in a white puffy jacket and an image of billowing black smoke next to a building accompanie­d with a claim that it showed an explosion near the Pentagon.

Politician­s have even enlisted AI to warn about its dangers. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n used Openai’s CHATGPT to craft the opening of a speech to Parliament last week, saying it was written “with such conviction that few of us would believe that it was a robot — and not a human — behind it.”

European and U.S. officials said last week that they’re drawing up a voluntary code of conduct for artificial intelligen­ce that could be

ready within weeks as a way to bridge the gap before the EU’S AI rules take effect.

Similar voluntary commitment­s in the bloc’s disinforma­tion code will become legal obligation­s by the end of August under the EU’S Digital Services Act, which will force the biggest tech companies to better police their platforms to protect users from hate speech, disinforma­tion and other harmful material.

Jourova said, however, that those companies should start labeling

Ai-generated content immediatel­y.

Most digital giants are already signed up to the EU disinforma­tion code, which requires companies to measure their work on combating false informatio­n and issue regular reports on their progress.

Twitter dropped out last month in what appeared to be the latest move by Elon Musk to loosen restrictio­ns at the social media company after he bought it last year.

The exit drew a stern rebuke, with Jourova calling it a mistake.

“Twitter has chosen the hard way. They chose confrontat­ion,” she said. “Make no mistake, by leaving the code, Twitter has

attracted a lot of attention, and its actions and compliance with EU law will be scrutinize­d vigorously and urgently.”

Twitter will face a major test later this month when European Commission­er Thierry Breton heads to its San Francisco headquarte­rs with a team to carry out a “stress test,” meant to measure the platform’s ability to comply with the Digital Services Act.

Breton, who’s in charge of digital policy, told reporters Monday that he also will visit other Silicon Valley tech companies including Openai, chipmaker Nvidia and Meta.

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