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  1. Forum
  2. Micronet
  3. MIN COMP
  • CRYPTO-GRAM, December 15, 2024 Part 5

    From Sean Rima@618:500/14.1 to All on Mon Dec 23 11:41:20 2024
    [https://fortune.com/2023/10/17/new-york-city-mnayor-eric-adams-uses-ai-to-speak-mandarin/],
    used AI to translate meetings and speeches to their diverse constituents.

    Even when politicians themselves arenΓÇÖt speaking through AI, their constituents might be using it to listen to them. Google rolled out free translation services for an additional 110 languages [https://blog.google/products/translate/google-translate-new-languages-2024/] this summer, available to billions of people in real time through their smartphones.

    Other candidates used AIΓÇÖs conversational capabilities to connect with voters. U.S. politicians Asa Hutchinson [https://www.techtarget.com/searchcio/news/366560453/Presidential-candidates-AI-chatbot-fields-policy-questions],
    Dean Phillips [https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/01/20/openai-dean-phillips-ban-chatgpt/]
    and Francis Suarez [https://www.cbsnews.com/miami/news/mayor-suarez-launches-an-artificial-intelligence-chatbot-for-his-presidential-campaign-3/]
    deployed chatbots of themselves in their presidential primary campaigns.
    The fringe candidate Jason Palmer [https://www.wsj.com/articles/underdog-who-beat-biden-in-american-samoa-used-ai-in-election-campaign-b0ce62d6]
    beat Joe Biden in the American Samoan primary, at least partly thanks to
    using AI-generated emails, texts, audio and video. PakistanΓÇÖs former prime minister, Imran Khan [https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/11/world/asia/imran-khan-artificial-intelligence-pakistan.html],
    used an AI clone of his voice to deliver speeches from prison.

    Perhaps the most effective use of this technology was in Japan, where an obscure and independent Tokyo gubernatorial candidate, Takahiro Anno [https://note.com/nishiohirokazu/n/n0c7805faabca], used an AI avatar to
    respond to 8,600 questions [https://futurepolis.substack.com/p/meet-your-ai-politician-of-the-future]
    from voters and managed to come in fifth among a highly competitive field
    of 56 candidates.

    * NUTS AND BOLTS

    AIs have been used in political fundraising as well. Companies like Quiller [https://quiller.ai] and Tech for Campaigns [https://www.axios.com/2024/01/30/ai-campaign-fundraising-democrats-chatgpt] market AIs to help draft fundraising emails. Other AI systems help
    candidates target particular donors [https://www.donoratlas.com] with personalized messages [https://www.newpaltz.edu/schoolofbusiness/hvventurehub/newsletter/article/august-2024/daisychains-innovation-in-campaign-organizing/].
    ItΓÇÖs notoriously difficult to measure the impact of these kinds of tools,
    and political consultants are cagey about what really works, but thereΓÇÖs clearly interest in continuing to use these technologies in campaign fundraising.

    Polling has been highly mathematical for decades, and pollsters are
    constantly incorporating new technologies into their processes. Techniques range from using AI to distill voter sentiment from social networking
    platforms -- something known as ΓÇ£social listening [https://doi.org/10.1080/10904018.2017.1330656]ΓÇ£ -- to creating synthetic voters [https://doi.org/10.1162/99608f92.1d3cf75d] that can answer tens of thousands of questions. Whether these AI applications will result in more accurate polls and strategic insights for campaigns remains to be seen, but there is [https://doi.org/10.1162/99608f92.1d3cf75d] promising [https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2411.10109] research [https://hal.science/hal-04688498/document] motivated by the
    ever-increasing challenge of reaching real humans with surveys.

    On the political organizing side, AI assistants are being used for such
    diverse purposes as helping craft political messages and strategy [https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/how-ai-is-transforming-the-way-political-campaigns-work/],
    generating ads [https://www.wired.com/story/battelgroundai-ai-progressive-political-ads/], drafting speeches [https://www.forbes.com/sites/siladityaray/2024/06/14/trump-says-he-had-a-speech-rewritten-by-ai-and-decided-im-going-to-use-this/]
    and helping coordinate canvassing [https://www.robeisenbach.com/cases/comm-voice] and get-out-the-vote
    efforts. In Argentina in 2023, both major presidential candidates used AI [https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/15/world/americas/argentina-election-ai-milei-massa.html]
    to develop campaign posters, videos and other materials.

    In 2024, similar capabilities were almost certainly used in a variety of elections around the world. In the U.S., for example, a Georgia politician
    used AI [https://www.gpb.org/news/2024/04/25/georgia-political-campaigns-start-deploy-ai-humans-still-needed-press-the-flesh]
    to produce blog posts, campaign images and podcasts. Even standard
    productivity software suites like those from Adobe, Microsoft and Google
    now integrate AI features that are unavoidable -- and perhaps very useful
    to campaigns. Other AI systems help advise candidates [https://campaignsandelections.com/campaigntech/ai-is-helping-candidates-decide-on-runs-for-higher-office/]
    looking to run for higher office.

    * FAKES AND COUNTERFAKES

    And there was AI-created misinformation and propaganda, even though it was
    not as catastrophic as feared. Days before a Slovakian election in 2023,
    fake audio [https://ipi.media/slovakia-deepfake-audio-of-dennik-n-journalist-offers-worrying-example-of-ai-abuse/]
    discussing election manipulation went viral. This kind of thing happened
    many times in 2024, but itΓÇÖs unclear if any of it had any real effect.

    In the U.S. presidential election, there was a lot of press after a
    robocall of a fake Joe Biden voice [https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/fake-joe-biden-robocall-tells-new-hampshire-democrats-not-vote-tuesday-rcna134984]
    told New Hampshire voters not to vote in the Democratic primary, but that didnΓÇÖt appear to make much of a difference in that vote. Similarly, AI-generated images from hurricane disaster areas didnΓÇÖt seem to have much effect, and neither did a stream of AI-faked celebrity endorsements [https://www.cnn.com/2024/08/22/media/fake-celebrity-endorsements-social-media-2024-election-misinformation/index.html]
    or viral deepfake images and videos [https://apnews.com/article/artificial-intellgence-memes-trump-harris-deepfakes-256282c31fa9316c4059f09036c70fa9/]
    misrepresenting candidatesΓÇÖ actions and seemingly designed to prey on their political weaknesses.

    AI also played a role in protecting the information ecosystem. OpenAI used
    its own AI models to disrupt an Iranian foreign influence operation [https://www.npr.org/2024/08/17/nx-s1-5079397/openai-chatgpt-iranian-group-us-election]
    aimed at sowing division before the U.S. presidential election. While
    anyone can use AI tools today to generate convincing fake audio, images and text, and that capability is here to stay, tech platforms also use AI to automatically moderate content [https://rebootdemocracy.ai/blog/Ai-Powered-Content-Moderation] like hate speech and extremism. This is a positive use case, making content
    moderation more efficient and sparing humans from having to review the
    worst offenses, but thereΓÇÖs room for it to become more effective, more transparent and more equitable.

    ---
    * Origin: High Portable Tosser at my node (618:500/14.1)

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