Weekly AI Roundup - Deepfakes Meddle with U.S Elections, Again
U.S elections in turmoil, again.
It is deja-vu back to 2016, as a network of Russia-based websites are masquerading as local American newspapers and pumping out AI-generated fake stories targeting the November U.S elections. Between May 2014 and November 2016, Russia carried out a comprehensive and sustained operation to undermine U.S elections. It was a multi-pronged attack, on four fronts. Hacking into and releasing confidential documents and emails from Clinton campaign staff; Hacking into voter registration databases in all 50 states and stealing voter information; Deploying a "troll farm" of thousands of social media accounts that used the stolen information to target false messages that disparaged Hillary Clinton; and Allegedly funneling $30 million dollars through NRA to fund Trump's election campaign.
Fake news, turbocharged with AI
2024 is starting to see another wave of misinformation. It began with a post alleging the first lady of Ukraine bought a rare Bugatti Tourbillon sports car for €4.5M while visiting Paris for the D-Day commemorations in June. And that the source of funds was supposedly American military aid money. A completely false report that Bugatti Paris has categorically denied as fake news. But before the truth actually had a chance to catch up, the story spread like wildfire on X, as pro-Russia, pro-Trump junkies retweeted the picture of a fake invoice, seen by at least 12M users. At its heart is former U.S cop John Mark Dougan - one among several mules spreading misinformation. “For me it’s a game," he said. “And a little payback.” To these and an alarming amount of former police officers, this is just a game of oneupmanship.
Attacks more nuanced this time
The misinformation campaign has gone beyond social media, and are now targeting local news media. With U.S losing more than two local newspapers a week in 2023, the fake news syndicates are filling the void with AI-generated newspapers spreading misinformation. They use American-sounding names like "Houston Post" and "Boston Times" to appear credible, with some even reviving defunct newspapers from the grave like "The Chicago Chronicle" - which went out of business decades ago. These fake outlets plagiarize real news, rewritten using AI prompts to vilify Democrats and glorify Republicans and Trump. So shoddy that in some cases, their prompts were left intact in the article. With over half of U.S counties having just one or no local news outlets, they will now be served with a healthy dose of fake news.
Social Media Platforms feel deliberately defenseless
Twitter which had once aimed at lofty goals of being an independent communication platform, has been rapidly devolving into a social media dumpster. Along with rebranding itself as X, its recent CEO Elon Musk abruptly dismantled its Trust and Safety council, established in the aftermath of 2016 election debacle. The team of volunteer civil rights leaders, academics and advocates, played a key role to address issues related to hate speech, terrorism, child exploitation, and misinformation. Precisely the sort of team that could take a sustained effort in combating deep fakes.
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Facebook's measures have mostly been incremental when they were in place. Their policy of reducing visibility for "repeat offender" websites have reduced engagement on posts by misinformation groups from 16% to 31%. However, Facebook doesn't proactively show fact-checks to users who have already seen misinformation. So the damage is left unchecked. Furthermore, internal documents show Facebook rolled back the safeguards it had implemented ahead of the 2020 elections. This allowed the right-wing conspiratorial content to fester in the weeks leading up to the January 6 riot at the U.S Capitol.
What's next?
The relative ease in creating convincing fake content, and the unchecked virility on social media platforms are enabling the fake news mafia to spread their wings further. The operation is already in motion, spreading false stories about UK and French politics ahead of this week's general elections, as well as the 2024 Paris Olympics. As with anything nefarious, the cat and mouse game continues, but it looks like mouse is winning while the cat is found napping for the most part. We will continue tracking this story as it unfolds over the next several weeks.
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