China Daily

OpenAI to help fight fake news during polls

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SAN FRANCISCO — ChatGPT maker OpenAI has said it will introduce tools to combat disinforma­tion ahead of the dozens of elections this year in countries that are home to half the world’s population.

The explosive success of text generator ChatGPT spurred a global artificial intelligen­ce revolution, but also triggered warnings that such tools could flood the internet with disinforma­tion and sway voters.

With elections due this year in countries including the United States, India and Britain, OpenAI said on Monday it will not allow its technology — including ChatGPT and image generator DALL-E 3 — to be used for political campaigns.

“We want to make sure our technology is not used in a way that could undermine” the democratic process, OpenAI said in a blog post.

“We’re still working to understand how effective our tools might be for personaliz­ed persuasion,” it added.

AI-driven disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion are the biggest shortterm global risks and could undermine newly elected government­s in major economies, the World Economic Forum warned in a report released last week.

Fears over election disinforma­tion began years ago, but the public availabili­ty of potent AI text and image generators has boosted the threat, experts say, especially if users cannot easily tell if the content they see is fake or manipulate­d.

OpenAI said on Monday it was working on tools that would attach reliable attributio­n to text generated by ChatGPT, and also give users the ability to detect if an image was created using DALL-E 3.

OpenAI said ChatGPT, when asked procedural questions about US elections such as where to vote, will direct users to authoritat­ive websites.

“Lessons from this work will inform our approach in other countries and regions,” the company said.

Agence France-Presse has previously debunked deepfakes and doctored videos of US President Joe Biden announcing a military draft and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton endorsing Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for president.

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