Current:Home > MarketsCharles H. Sloan-Can AI steal the 2024 election? Not if America uses this weapon to combat misinformation. -AssetScope
Charles H. Sloan-Can AI steal the 2024 election? Not if America uses this weapon to combat misinformation.
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-10 09:27:10
Can democracy survive artificial intelligence?Charles H. Sloan As the 2024 election approaches, there are mounting fears of an explosion in false and manipulative AI-generated content, especially by hostile foreign governments.
The New York Times has warned of deepfakes that could "swing elections." The Biden administration has already urged caution around the use of AI, and the possibility of electoral manipulation puts even greater pressure on the White House and Congress to slow or even stop AI’s development.
Yet, the real solution is to speed up AI’s rollout. The most powerful defense against electorally weaponized artificial intelligence is the defensive application of artificial intelligence.
Any discussion of AI and elections must start with an uncomfortable fact: There’s no way to stop the creation of AI-generated misinformation and disinformation. Powerful AI tools already exist, and so long as the United States has foreign enemies, they will use AI to try to influence elections.
While the genie can’t be put back in the bottle, its power can be nullified with even more powerful technology.
The closest analogy is missile technology. Enemies make and use missiles, but we can intercept them with missiles of our own. The most obvious application of this approach is Israel’s Iron Dome, which uses interceptor missiles to destroy incoming rockets.
That’s what America needs: an AI-powered information iron dome. Such a system would leverage AI’s unprecedented pattern-recognition ability to identify coordinated attacks using false AI-generated content, whether articles, images or videos.
Seeing isn't believing:From Gaza to US politics, deepfake videos are peddling fake news
AI is more than powerful enough to fulfill this role. Consider efforts over the past several years to train an AI model to detect lip-sync deepfakes.
Humans struggle to say words beginning with M, B or P without closing their mouth (try saying “peanut butter brittle”). But deepfakes frequently ignore this reality. The casual observer might not realize it, but researchers have found that a trained model can identify these instances with surprising accuracy. Trained on videos of former President Barack Obama, their model spotted deepfakes over 90% of the time.
AI is better than humans at finding deepfakes
Given the potential volume of such content, it would take an army of humans to identify AI-driven attempts to influence elections, requiring enormous sums of money and time while still suffering from human error.
By contrast, AI tools could scan the internet far more quickly, efficiently and effectively, labeling deepfakes almost as soon as they enter the public discourse.
To use the rocket analogy, it’s the difference between the high-tech, integrated missile-defense system and a swarm of soldiers with shoulder-mounted rockets pointed toward the sky. There’s a reason Israel chose the Iron Dome.
Private companies should drive the creation of this cutting-edge technology. Putting election-focused AI in the hands of politicized agencies would invite abuse and undermine the very democracy we seek to protect.
We can save our democracy:Will the 2024 election rip America apart? Here's how we can hold it together.
Nor is it wise to give government agencies vast regulatory power over AI and elections. The resulting burdens would likely stifle innovation, leaving the technology’s development to a handful of larger companies.
That would also undermine Americans’ trust in democracy, given widespread concerns over bias within particular models.
AI development should be encouraged at the widest and most diverse array of companies possible. Fierce competition will encourage companies to avoid ideology and provide the most effective products.
Tech firms can develop the tools needed to safeguard elections
American companies are the world leaders in AI, so they’re well-suited to develop this technology. The startup DeepMedia is already helping the Pentagon detect deepfakes that threaten national security, like the deepfake of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy telling his forces to surrender.
This same technology could be further developed to protect elections by helping voters spot deepfakes as they encounter them.
Let's fast-forward Biden vs. Trump:Who else doesn't feel like the 2024 election has begun? Can we just get on with it?
Similar technology discovered that a famous artistic work by a previously unknown artist is actually a Raphael masterpiece, while another AI program determined that part of a different Raphael work was likely painted by someone else, based on microscopic clues across the artist’s known paintings.
If AI can decipher the secrets of Renaissance masters, it can ferret out deepfakes from Russia.
Even rudimentary AI programs could quickly identify the still-widespread use of comparatively low-tech election interference efforts − think troll farms in North Macedonia and the Philippines.
As my colleague Neil Chilson, a former chief technologist at the Federal Trade Commission, explained in his recent testimony before the Senate, “Malicious actors don’t use cutting-edge tech. Cheap fakes, selective editing, overseas content farms, and plain old Photoshop are inexpensive and effective enough.”
An AI iron dome would help identify these threats even faster, much as the actual Iron Dome protects against artillery shells as well as rockets.
Uncertainty caused by the threat of regulation, along with ongoing and loud calls to “pause” AI development, has held back the maximum innovation in the election-protection space. If policymakers make clear that companies can act within the bounds of existing law, the benefits will almost certainly be felt before the November election.
Foreign countries like Russia, China and Iran are acutely aware of AI’s power and are guaranteed to apply it in their election-manipulation efforts, if they aren’t already.
If America does anything other than fully unleash AI to protect our democracy, it will be a particularly foolish form of unilateral disarmament.
Christopher Koopman is executive director of the Center for Growth and Opportunity at Utah State University.
veryGood! (166)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Bill Belichick's absence from NFL coaching sidelines looms large – but maybe not for long
- Mary Lou Retton Tears Up Over Inspirational Messages From Her 1984 Olympic Teammates
- Flamin' Hot Cheetos 'inventor' sues Frito-Lay alleging 'smear campaign'
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Man accused of mass shooting attempt at Virginia church ruled competent to stand trial
- Alicia Vikander Privately Welcomed Another Baby With Husband Michael Fassbender
- Workers at GM seat supplier in Missouri each tentative agreement, end strike
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- San Diego Padres in playoff hunt despite trading superstar Juan Soto: 'Vibes are high'
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Powerball winning numbers for July 24 drawing: Jackpot at $114 million
- Jennifer Lopez thanks fans for 'loyalty' in 'good times' and 'tough times' as she turns 55
- US viewers’ Olympics interest is down, poll finds, except for Simone Biles
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- West Virginia official quits over conflict of interest allegations; interim chief named
- Jennifer Lopez thanks fans for 'loyalty' in 'good times' and 'tough times' as she turns 55
- Company says manufacturing problem was behind wind turbine blade breaking off Nantucket Island
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Biden signs bill strengthening oversight of crisis-plagued federal Bureau of Prisons
Horoscopes Today, July 25, 2024
Prisoners fight against working in heat on former slave plantation, raising hope for change in South
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Watch: Trail cam captures bear cubs wrestling, playing in California pond
Man arrested on arson charge after Arizona wildfire destroyed 21 homes, caused evacuations
What's next for 3-time AL MVP Mike Trout after latest injury setback?