The Unconventional Impact of AI on American Elections

The Unconventional Impact of AI on American Elections

AI will change American elections, but ‌not in ‌the obvious way

THE day before ​Chicago’s mayoral election in February, a ⁣recording began circulating online. It was first posted on Twitter (now X) by a newly created account‍ called Chicago Lakefront‌ News. It featured what‌ sounded like Paul Vallas, the law-and-order candidate, bemoaning all the fuss about police brutality and harking back to a halcyon time when cops could kill suspects by the dozen “and no ⁢one would​ bat ​an​ eye”. It ⁤was political dynamite and was quickly⁤ shared by thousands. But the voice in⁢ the ‌recording ⁤was not Mr ​Vallas’s, nor any⁣ human’s: it was a “deepfake”, generated by artificial-intelligence (AI) software, which ‌had​ been​ trained to mimic the sound of Mr Vallas’s voice.

This is the⁤ sort of incident that is keeping candidates, political analysts and anyone worried about the‍ health of democracy up at night. Countries with a collective‍ population of some 4bn—including America, Britain, India, Indonesia, Mexico and Taiwan—all vote for leaders‌ in 2024. Given AI’s ⁢existing⁤ capabilities and rapid evolution, ​it‍ seems inevitable‍ that at⁤ least some of these contests will be manipulated by subterfuges like the one that targeted⁤ Mr Vallas. Tech luminaries⁤ are sounding the ​alarm. Eric⁤ Schmidt, a former CEO of Google‌ (and ‍a former member of The Economist Group’s board), has warned ‌that “the 2024 elections are going‍ to be⁣ a mess because social media is not protecting us from false ⁣generative ‍AI”. Sam Altman,‌ the CEO of OpenAI, the ⁢startup behind ChatGPT, recently posted that he was ⁣“nervous about the impact AI is going ⁢to have on future elections⁣ (at ⁢least until everyone gets used to it)”.

Politicians are also concerned (naturally). At a hearing in late July, senators grilled AI experts ​about the likelihood of elections being manipulated. “I, for one,‍ do ⁢not want the working⁢ people in this country and the children of this country to be ⁤used as⁤ guinea pigs⁢ for generative⁢ ai,”…

2023-08-31 05:55:51
Link from www.economist.com

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