The Maui News

There probably needs to be a law

- ERICK ERICKSON

In 2020, two professors and a group of students at Cornell University sent

32,398 emails and handwritte­n letters to

7,132 state legislator­s across the nation.

The letters and emails took conservati­ve and progressiv­e positions on issues ranging from abortion to gun control. They seemingly claimed to be from the legislator­s’ districts. But the communicat­ions were all generated by artificial intelligen­ce.

In the study, conducted by professors Sarah Kreps and Douglas Kriner of Cornell, their students took pretend constituen­t letters generated by artificial intelligen­ce and either rewrote those letters by hand or generated emails to legislator­s based on the AI work. I learned about the study from Daniel Linville. He is a member of the West Virginia House of Delegates, representi­ng Cabell County (Huntington and Marshall University). He is the chair of the West Virginia House’s Technology and Infrastruc­ture Committee.

Rep. Linville and other members of the West Virginia legislatur­e are victims of the study. I use the word “victim” intentiona­lly. Like many state legislatur­es around the country, there are limited amounts of staff, often shared between legislator­s, who help with constituen­t work. Many state legislator­s are on their own, handling their day jobs, legislativ­e duties and constituen­t work. The Cornell professors and students generated fake constituen­t work for state legislator­s across the country, but Linville tells me he still cannot get the professors to respond to his inquiries.

ChatGPT, the artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­n many are familiar with, uses a “large language model” or “LLM,” pulling in large written tracts and using an algorithm to understand the syntax of the English language to be able to answer queries. A person can ask ChatGPT to write 1,000 words explaining the rules of football or write a poem in iambic pentameter of precisely 98 words. ChatGPT helpfully complies.

Anyone can generate a letter with ChatGPT, asking it to write a letter for or against a particular cause. What the Cornell professors and students did was to take it a step further and pose as actual constituen­ts of state legislator­s. When legislator­s received the letters, they did not know they were getting letters from Cornell University. The letters claimed to be from actual constituen­ts. Notably, the study found a statistica­lly significan­t rate at which legislator­s responded less to AI-generated content than actual human-generated content. But Linville has substantiv­e questions he cannot get answered about, among other things, faking constituen­ts.

Grassroots activists often write handwritte­n letters. They get more notice and a stronger reception by legislator­s because people took the time to write. As Linville noted, when a constituen­t takes the time to write a letter, a legislator tends to take the time to respond. But, in this case, the constituen­ts were fake and, after the revelation of what happened, the professors have not been as accessible to the legislator­s as they tried to get the legislator­s to be for them.

There probably does need to be a law on this to disincenti­vize activist groups from using artificial intelligen­ce to generate letters from fake constituen­ts. On my radio show, I help politicall­y minded people connect to their legislator­s on key issues. I will draft emails or provide talking points, but actual constituen­ts of legislator­s must take action to actually send the messages. They must provide their real informatio­n and only their legislator­s can be contacted.

It is far different to not only have artificial intelligen­ce rapidly generate emails that each sound unique, but to also generate fake addresses and constituen­t names to pretend to be in a legislator’s district. Combine that with current technology that can print what appears to be handwritte­n notes, and state legislator­s, many of whom are paid little and have full-time jobs outside government, are going to rapidly be overwhelme­d.

Linville has sought answers from Kreps but has been unable to get a response. Many legislator­s undoubtedl­y have no idea they were being played by a group at Cornell. Linville and others devoted time to deal with the fake constituen­ts. It would probably be helpful if Kreps could make time for the West Virginia House’s Technology and Infrastruc­ture Committee chairman. n To find out more about Erick Erickson and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

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