There is definitely an arms race when it comes to AI, but there is an element of mutually assured destruction. The government is struggling to figure out how to police the use of AI in campaigns. Some far-right politicians in Germany used AI to generate images of immigrants that look very angry and violent. Here back in the US, we're seeing a lot more of that.
As the saying goes: a lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to put its pants on. As AI is increasing productivity across industries, it’s also raising concern about how to regulate its output and keep it from putting many of us out of work. And as the next campaign season approaches, another question comes into focus: what about its potential to quickly create and spread misinformation about political rivals?
Bloomberg’s Laura Davison and Emily Birnbaum raise the curtain on the little regulated and largely vexing ability to disseminate political hay and deepfakes via a chatbot.
Read more: AI Is Making Politics Easier, Cheaper and More Dangerous
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