HomeNewsOpinionIf AI wrecks democracy, we may never know

If AI wrecks democracy, we may never know

Propaganda doesn’t need to go viral to sway elections anymore. That makes AI’s impact more insidious and harder to detect

May 06, 2024 / 10:31 IST
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AI influencing Elections
AI may be disrupting elections right now and we just don’t know it. (Source: Al Drago/Getty Images North America - 2020)

This year promises to be a whopper for elective government, with billions of people — or more than 40 percent of the world’s population — able to vote in an election. But nearly five months into 2024, some government officials are quietly wondering why the looming risk of AI hasn’t, apparently, played out. Even as voters in Indonesia and Pakistan have gone to the polls, they are seeing little evidence of viral deepfakes skewing an electoral outcome, according to a recent article in Politico, which cited “national security officials, tech company executives and outside watchdog groups.” AI, they said, wasn’t having the “mass impact” that they expected.

That is a painfully shortsighted view. The reason? AI may be disrupting elections right now and we just don’t know it.

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The problem is that officials are looking for a Machiavellian version of the Balenciaga Pope. Remember the AI-generated images of Pope Francis in a puffer jacket that went viral last year? That’s what many now expect from generative AI tools — which can conjure humanlike text, images and videos en masse, making it just as easy to spot as previous persuasion campaigns that supported Donald Trump from Macedonia or spread divisive political content on Twitter and Facebook from Russia. So-called astroturfing was easy to identify when an array of bots was saying the same thing thousands of times.

It is much harder to catch someone saying the same thing, slightly differently, thousands of times, though. That, in a nutshell, is what makes AI-powered disinformation so much harder to detect, and its why tech companies need to shift their focus from “virality to variety,” says Josh Lawson, who was head of electoral risk at Meta Platforms Inc. and now advises social media firms as a director at the Aspen Institute, a think tank.