Tech Conglomerates Vow to Combat AI Misinformation During 2024 Elections

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In this agreement, the companies in question confirm they’ll actively seek out tools to catch and handle specific content made with AI. The content in question is intentionally designed to mislead not just American voters, but also other people around the world.

Given the current issues that already emerged with deepfake speeches and phony robocalls convincingly resembling US politicians, officials recognize that AI management goes hand-in-hand with preserving election integrity.

Without strategic action to prevent misinformation from artificial intelligence, millions of voters could be misled about a candidate’s policies or actions. Likewise, people around the world who see and believe deepfake footage of political candidates may easily believe a version of events that differs from reality.

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This carries significant weight not just here in the United States, but also across the globe. In American elections and races happening in dozens of other nations, people deserve to know the truth and avoid falling victim to lies.

More AI regulations to come?

All things considered, Americans can likely expect more regulations for artificial intelligence to emerge. Several publications and creators have begun suing AI companies for relying on copyrighted content to give instructions to generative bots.