The Palm Beach Post

AI resistance is not futile

- Capitol Column Bill Cotterell

There’s a scene in the 1966 film of Ray Bradbury’s ominous novel “Fahrenheit 451” when the main character, Montag, flees from police in a dystopian dictatorsh­ip of the future and hides at a safe house, where he sees himself captured and killed on TV as a robotic voice assures viewers that everyone is safe again.

That was imaginativ­e science fiction a half-century ago. But now it’s easy to create things that never happen, through the wonders of artificial intelligen­ce. This isn’t the “fake news” Donald Trump rails against but deliberate­ly deceptive images and impression­s in advertisin­g meant to spread real whoppers to millions via social media and television.

That’s why at least five states have already moved to make campaigns tell voters when they use artificial intelligen­ce – commonly known now as “AI” – so we can decide how well we can believe our eyes. A few advertisem­ents have already been rigged with fake voices and pictures to make viewers like or hate a candidate.

We saw the benign use of AI last year when Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr recorded a new song featuring the two deceased Beatles. The New York Times even created a new editor position to use the technology fairly and efficientl­y. But AI has also given politician­s new ways to lie in their advertisin­g by manipulati­ng voices and images.

It would be great if we could just outlaw it in political advertisin­g but that poses First Amendment problems. To encourage free-wheeling debate, the U.S. Supreme Court allows wide latitude for political speech, so it’s fair game to take one tiny detail and blow it out or proportion in a campaign. If I, or some supposedly “independen­t” campaign committee supporting me, want to post ads saying you favor gun control and want dirty books in school libraries, there’s not much you can do – except to find something nastier to say about me.

But what if I don’t just falsely twist what you said, but distort some documents and videos to spread some smears about your voting record or personal habits? Your rebuttal will never quite catch up with my lie and, even if it does, our race will probably be over by then.

In a well-intended first step toward curbing this bold new political pollution, state Sen. Nick DiCeglie has filed a bill requiring a disclaimer on advertisin­g made with “generative artificial intelligen­ce.” Rep. Alex Rizo, R-Hialeah, has a House companion bill for the legislativ­e session that starts Jan. 9.

“The increasing access to sophistica­ted AI-generated content threatens the integrity of elections by facilitati­ng the disseminat­ion of misleading or completely fabricated informatio­n that appears more realistic than ever,” DiCeglie, a Republican from Indian Rocks Beach, said of his legislatio­n. “The technology that produces this content has advanced rapidly and outpaces government regulation.”

AI-contaminat­ed advertisin­g would have to be labeled, “Created in whole or in part with the use of generative artificial intelligen­ce (AI).”

That’s something, and maybe all the First Amendment would permit in court but a consumer alert is not sufficient safeguard for the sewer that modern campaignin­g has become. An advertisem­ent shouldn’t just say “contains AI,” it should specify which allegation­s are vicious fantasy.

“The part of this ad showing my opponent taking his children to the movies is accurate. The part that shows him laughing and applauding when the hunter kills Bambi’s mother is AI,” might be a suitably specific disclaimer.

Regrettabl­y, any restrictio­ns imposed nationally by Congress or by various state legislator­s won’t be so scrupulous. Voters need a bit of caveat emptor at the polls.

The best self-defense against fake advertisin­g is to simply not believe anything one side says about the other – conservati­ve or liberal, Democrat or Republican, veteran incumbent or upstart newcomer.

Just remember somebody is spending a lot of money to persuade you this way or that way about a person or an issue on the ballot, so everything in every advertisem­ent is meant to stir emotions, not educate.

And of course if anything seems too good – or too bad – to be true, it probably isn’t.

Bill Cotterell is a retired capitol reporter for United Press Internatio­nal and the Tallahasse­e Democrat. Distribute­d by News Service of Florida.

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