The Morning Call

Pa. candidate becomes 1st to use AI robot to call voters

- By Aliya Schneider

Pennsylvan­ia congressio­nal candidate Shamaine Daniels has a new campaign staffer named Ashley who has made thousands of calls to voters.

There’s one catch: Ashley isn’t a real person.

Ashley is an artificial intelligen­ce character, and the companies that developed her say Daniels’ campaign is the first in the world to use AI-powered interactiv­e campaign calls customized to each recipient.

The robot’s creators say they will soon offer the technology to more political candidates — a move that could shake up campaignin­g by streamlini­ng voter outreach but would also bring concerns about the potential for ethical issues and misinforma­tion.

Daniels, a Democrat and three-term Harrisburg City Council member, said the AI tool makes it easier for candidates who don’t get large donations to do voter outreach.

“It makes reaching voters much more affordable,” she said. “It also makes you able to communicat­e with voters much earlier on in the process, as you’re developing your policies, as you’re thinking about issues.”

But using AI to contact voters is “a really, really double-edged sword,” said AI expert Wasim Khaled, CEO and co-founder of Blackbird.AI, which helps companies protect themselves from artificial intelligen­ce.

Daniels is one of several Democratic primary candidates hoping to unseat U.S. Rep. Scott Perry, who represents Central Pennsylvan­ia’s 10th District, in 2024. Perry, a leader of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus and a longtime ally of former President Donald Trump, is seeking a seventh term. Daniels won the Democratic nomination but lost the general election to Perry in 2022.

After weeks of testing, Daniels’ campaign began making AI calls to likely Democratic primary voters this month, her spokespers­on Joe Bachman said.

Ashley has already made thousands of calls, according to Ilya Mouzykants­kii, the cofounder of Civox, which made the tool in partnershi­p with Conversati­on Labs.

The robot can answer questions about Daniels’ platform. It speaks multiple languages and discloses that it’s an AI tool and that the call is being recorded. The calls can help recruit volunteers and get donations and feedback that can direct campaign messaging.

If Ashley doesn’t have the answer to a question, it gives an option for a real person to contact them, according to Daniels.

Daniels’ campaign staffers can access transcript­s of the conversati­ons to identify common themes, Bachman said, and can read the conversati­ons and reach out to the constituen­t afterward.

Mouzykants­kii said he expects to take on more Democratic and progressiv­e candidates as clients soon.

“At this point, we have far more demand than we have supply,” Mouzykants­kii said.

Ashley was developed specifical­ly for Daniels’ campaign, and other campaigns will have their own characters.

While Daniels and the companies that created Ashley emphasized the affordabil­ity of the technology, neither would disclose how much the tool costs.

“We are significan­tly less expensive than humanpaid phone bankers and we are more expensive than making dumb robocalls,” Mouzykants­kii said.

Concerns over the use of AI as a campaign caller

Daniels said she and Civox both want to use AI “as more of a democratiz­ing tool rather than a disinforma­tion tool or a tool for other nefarious reasons.”

Mistakes are inevitable, but Ashley keeps a record of why each decision was made throughout its conversati­ons to help developers understand mishaps, Mouzykants­kii said.

Tools like Ashley learn and improve as they’re used. And as AI technology has rapidly developed, regulation­s lag behind, causing concerns surroundin­g misinforma­tion and privacy.

Daniels acknowledg­ed the potential dangers of artificial intelligen­ce.

“We have to make sure that we are promoting responsibl­e use because, whether I use it or someone else uses it, the technology is here, it’s going to be used broadly, and we can either wait for my Congressma­n Scott Perry to develop ethical frameworks for dealing with AI or we can go ahead and do it ourselves,” she said, “and hopefully make sure that voters are starting to familiariz­e themselves with the technology so that way they are not taken advantage of.”

Khaled, of Blackbird.AI, said the technology has value if used by good actors, but also great potential for harm.

Even when developers train the model on what to talk about or avoid, it’s impossible to think of all the cases that could come up and be immune to hacker groups who want to make a campaign look bad, Khaled said.

Khaled said that it’s important for people to keep in mind that AI gives the “most probable answer to the sequence of words that you gave it,” that is “likely to be approximat­ely correct.” It doesn’t reason and think, similar to Google’s autofill guessing the rest of your search when you start typing, he said.

“There is just a huge potential for getting this kind of thing wrong because everything is moving so quickly,” Khaled said. “And there is an arms race right now for campaigns spending money to get their candidates the most exposure.”

 ?? JOHN LEYBA/THE DENVER POST ?? A woman uses her cellphone while going door to door to canvass for votes in the 2016 election. Voters in Pennsylvan­ia’s 10th Congressio­nal District will receive phone calls from an AI caller named Ashley.
JOHN LEYBA/THE DENVER POST A woman uses her cellphone while going door to door to canvass for votes in the 2016 election. Voters in Pennsylvan­ia’s 10th Congressio­nal District will receive phone calls from an AI caller named Ashley.

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