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United StatesEconomy5 days ago

An explosion of AI deepfakes is redefining American elections

AI-generated content, including deepfakes, is increasingly being used in American political campaigns to create misleading or fictitious scenarios involving candidates. Examples include an attack ad against Texas Democratic Senate nominee James Talarico produced by a Trump-aligned group, which depicted him in a dress singing about transgender children. Similar tactics have been employed in other races, such as those in Kentucky. While some campaigns disclose their use of AI, there is currently no legal requirement to do so.

Andrew Solender

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Campaign ads featuring AI-generated clips and images once sounded like a laughable concept. Now they're everywhere, with attack ads that place candidates in a wide variety of compromising — and fictitious — situations.

Why it matters: This largely unregulated practice is warping the unspoken norms of political campaigns and blurring the line between truth and fiction.

Some campaigns voluntarily disclose this AI use, but it's not required.

Democrats want to change that if they retake control of Congress in November.

Driving the news: The latest spot to push the envelope is an attack ad against Texas Democratic Senate nominee James Talarico from a President Trump-aligned group called Citizens for Sanity.

The ad depicts Talarico in a dress singing an abridged version of "Favorite Things" about transgender children.

Talarico has been a frequent target of this practice: The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) used AI in March to depict Talarico reciting past social media posts. The posts were real. Talarico reading them was not.

Zoom out: While the Texas Senate race has been a hotbed of AI use — Republicans John Cornyn and Ken Paxton and Democrat Jasmine Crockett all utilized it to some extent in the primaries — it is far from the only one.

The GOP primary in Kentucky's 4th district saw widespread AI use by both sides.

That included a "throuple" ad , which contained deepfakes of Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) dining, checking into a hotel and holding hands with Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).

Pro-Massie spots used AI to depict an elephant with Trump-like hair and a MAGA cap , and Ed Gallrein, Massie's challenger, abandoning Trump in a foxhole.

In Georgia, gubernatorial candidate Brad Raffensperger used AI in multiple ads to depict his GOP primary opponents wildly shooting guns in the air and fighting each other with pugil sticks .

A new ad from another Georgia gubernatorial candidate, Burt Jones, is entirely AI-generated and features depictions of his GOP primary runoff opponent Rick Jackson shoveling money into a furnace and inflating a hot air balloon with his breath.

It's not just Republicans making use of AI:

In Texas, Crockett made use of AI to inflate the crowd size in one of her ads and posted an AI video to social media of herself, Trump and others as babies.

In New York City, Democrat-turned-independent Andrew Cuomo used AI in the mayoral election in an ad that portrayed him performing various jobs , including subway conductor, stockbroker, stagehand and window washer.

In Maryland, a new ad from Democrat Harry Dunn in the 5th congressional district includes a brief shot of AI-generated men in suits reading "Crypto" and "AIPAC" tossing golden basketballs into a carnival free-throw game.

Read the full article at Axios
Source document: Citizens for Sanity

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AxiosIndependentCenter5 days ago
An explosion of AI deepfakes is redefining American elections

AI-generated content, including deepfakes, is increasingly being used in American political campaigns to create misleading or fictitious scenarios involving candidates. Examples include an attack ad against Texas Democratic Senate nominee James Talarico produced by a Trump-aligned group, which depicted him in a dress singing about transgender children. Similar tactics have been employed in other races, such as those in Kentucky. While some campaigns disclose their use of AI, there is currently no legal requirement to do so.

Bias read (Center): The article presents facts about the increasing use of AI in political campaigns without overtly favoring any side. It mentions both Democratic and Republican examples and notes that Democrats are pushing for regulation, but does not take a stance on the issue itself.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Citizens for Sanity
  • organisation National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC)

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationCitizens for Sanity
  • organisationNational Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC)