The Guardian (USA)

Fake Biden robocalls in New Hampshire linked to Texas companies, officials say

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US authoritie­s issued cease-and-desist orders on Tuesday against two Texas companies they believe were connected to robocalls that used artificial intelligen­ce to mimic Joe Biden’s voice and discourage people from voting in New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary last month.

During a news conference to discuss the investigat­ion, officials described the calls as the clearest and possibly first known attempt to use AI to interfere with an election in the US.

The New Hampshire attorney general, John Formella, said investigat­ors have identified the source of the calls as Life Corporatio­n and said they were transmitte­d by a company called Lingo Telecom.

New Hampshire issued ceaseand-desist orders and subpoenas to both companies, while the Federal Communicat­ions Commission issued a cease-and-desist letter to the telecommun­ications company, Formella said. In a statement, the FCC said it was trying to stop “behavior that violates voter suppressio­n laws.”

“That’s been something we’ve been concerned about in the law enforcemen­t community for a while, and it’s certainly something that state attorneys general have talked about, but we had not seen as concrete of an example as this, days before a primary,” he said.

A message left for Life Corporatio­n’s owner, Walter Monk, at his company Wholesale Communicat­ion was not immediatel­y returned. Alex Valencia, who was named in an FCC letter as the chief compliance officer at Lingo Telecom, did not immediatel­y return an emailed request for comment.

The recorded message was sent to between 5,000 and 25,000 voters two days before the 23 January primary. It used a voice similar to Biden’s, employed his often-used phrase, “What a bunch of malarkey” and falsely suggested that voting in the primary would preclude voters from casting a ballot in November’s general election.

Biden won the Democratic primary as a write-in candidate after he kept his name off the ballot in deference to South Carolina’s new lead-off position for the Democratic primaries.

The calls falsely showed up to recipients as coming from the personal cellphone number of Kathy Sullivan, a former state Democratic party chair who helps run Granite for America, a super Pac that supported the Biden write-in campaign. Formella said at least 10 people who received the calls then called Sullivan.

The apparent attempt at voter suppressio­n using rapidly advancing generative AI technology is one example of what experts warn will make 2024 a year of unpreceden­ted election disinforma­tion around the world. Formella said the investigat­ion is just beginning, but he wanted to send a strong message to deter others who might be tempted to interfere in this year’s elections.

“Our message is clear: law enforcemen­t across the country is unified on a bipartisan basis and ready to work together to combat any attempt to undermine our elections,” he said.

 ?? ?? President Joe Biden campaigns in Las Vegas, Nevada, on 4 February. Photograph: David Becker/EPA
President Joe Biden campaigns in Las Vegas, Nevada, on 4 February. Photograph: David Becker/EPA

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