The Denver Post

Deepfakes, fake electors top Griswold’s legislativ­e agenda

- By Nick Coltrain ncoltrain@denverpost.com

Reining in artificial intelligen­ce, cracking down on “fake elector” schemes and expanding voter access on tribal lands are Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold’s top priorities for this year’s legislativ­e session.

Griswold, joined by state lawmakers sponsoring the legislatio­n, outlined the measures Thursday afternoon with just weeks to go before Coloradans begin casting ballots in what will surely be another contentiou­s November presidenti­al election.

The state’s presidenti­al primaries are March 5, with ballots going out in February.

The elected officials warned that emerging AI technology and potential plots to replace Colorado’s presidenti­al electors — as was attempted in other states by then-president Donald Trump’s supporters after the 2020 election — could pose existentia­l threats to the country’s system of self-governance.

“An attempt to overthrow a free and fair election is an attack on the people of this nation and an attack that undermines the strength of our nation itself,” said state Sen. Nick Hinrichsen, a Pueblo Democrat sponsoring a bill to criminaliz­e schemes to install fraudulent slates of presidenti­al electors.

The bills have not been introduced formally in the legislatur­e, which reconvened this month.

As described by officials, the draft legislatio­n would:

• Require disclaimer­s on AIgenerate­d media, including manipulate­d audio and video, commonly called deepfakes, that feature Colorado candidates and officehold­ers. Violators could be subject to campaign finance enforcemen­t and penalties, and the bill would open the perpetrato­r up to civil action, akin to libel law standards.

• Make it a crime to create or conspire to create a fake slate of electoral college voters or serve as a fake elector, and bar people convicted under the proposed law from holding office in Colorado.

• Require the secretary of state’s office to convene periodic meetings with the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute tribes to discuss voting rights and voting access on tribal lands.

The AI bill comes as deepfakes are sneaking into the political discourse in the United States and abroad.

Just this week, an apparent deepfake audio clip of President Joe Biden’s voice

allegedly was used to deter New Hampshire residents from voting in that state’s first-in-the-nation primary.

“The future is already here, and the people of Colorado deserve to know what is real and what is manipulate­d,” said Rep. Junie Joseph, a Boulder Democrat.

Griswold, also a Democrat, said bill supporters were writing it to comply with First Amendment speech protection­s, while still holding AI election materials to the higher disclosure requiremen­ts of current campaign finance law.

 ?? HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST ?? At her office in Denver on Thursday, Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, front, unveils legislativ­e priorities that include legislatio­n pertaining to artificial intelligen­ce, fake-elector schemes and tribal engagement in elections.
HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST At her office in Denver on Thursday, Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, front, unveils legislativ­e priorities that include legislatio­n pertaining to artificial intelligen­ce, fake-elector schemes and tribal engagement in elections.

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