Chattanooga Times Free Press

Political ads using image-altering AI to require disclosure

- BY MICHELLE CHAPMAN

Google will soon require that political ads using artificial intelligen­ce be accompanie­d by a prominent disclosure if imagery or sounds have been synthetica­lly altered.

AI-generated election ads on YouTube and other Google platforms that alter people or events must include a clear disclaimer located somewhere that users are likely to notice, the company said in an update to its political content policy.

The new rule starts in midNovembe­r, just under a year before the U.S. presidenti­al election. It will also affect campaign ads ahead of next year’s elections in India, South Africa, the European Union and other regions where Google already has a verificati­on process for election advertiser­s.

Though fake images, videos or audio clips are not new to political advertisin­g, generative AI tools are making it easier to do, and more realistic. Some presidenti­al campaigns in the 2024 race — including that of Florida GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis — already are using the technology.

The Republican National Committee in April released an entirely AI-generated ad meant to show the future of the United States if President Joe Biden is re-elected. It employed fake but realistic photos showing boarded-up storefront­s, armored military patrols in the streets, and waves of immigrants creating panic.

In June, DeSantis’ campaign shared an attack ad against his GOP primary opponent Donald Trump that used AI-generated images of the former president hugging infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci.

Last month the Federal Election Commission began a process to potentiall­y regulate AI-generated deepfakes in political ads ahead of the 2024 election.

Such deepfakes can include synthetic voice of political figures saying something they never said.

Democratic U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, co-sponsor of pending legislatio­n that would require disclaimer­s on deceptive AI-generated political ads, said in a statement that Google’s announceme­nt was a step in the right direction but “we can’t solely rely on voluntary commitment­s.”

Several states also have discussed or passed legislatio­n

related to deepfake technology.

Google is not banning AI outright in political advertisin­g. Exceptions to the ban include synthetic content altered or generated in a way that’s inconseque­ntial to the claims made in the ad. AI can also be used in editing techniques like image resizing, cropping, color, defect correction, or background edits.

The ban will apply to election ads on Google’s own platforms, particular­ly YouTube, as well as third-party websites that are part of Google’s ad display network.

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