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Oil surges, stocks mixed as Trump dashes hopes of quick end of war
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Mickelson withdraws from Masters over family matter
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Blues rugby player retires after terminal cancer diagnosis
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Trump ballroom approved by panel, remains stalled by judge
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Resilient Pegula reaches WTA Charleston quarters with tiebreak win
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Pakistan hikes petrol, diesel prices due to Middle East war
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Trump orders new pharma tariff, reshapes metal duties
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Music and barbecues in Tehran despite Trump threats
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Bielle-Biarrey voted best player of Six Nations for second time
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Veteran QB Cousins to join Raiders: reports
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El Ghazi records final legal victory over Israel-Hamas posts
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Barca crush Real Madrid to reach women's Champions League semis
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UK police set up national hub to cut illegal knife sales
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French mayor denounces 'increasingly racist society'
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Head, Abhishek help Hyderabad thump Kolkata in IPL
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Trump sacks Bondi, appoints ex-personal attorney to head justice dept
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PSG return to domestic action with focus on Liverpool
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Cubans demand end of US embargo in bike protest
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Body camera video released from Woods arrest
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Artemis astronauts await green light for lunar orbit
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Travolta returns to Cannes with aviation-inspired directorial debut
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Grain, steel, fertiliser blocked by Hormuz closure: data
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De Zerbi to stay at Tottenham next season 'no matter what'
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Four children stabbed to death at Ugandan nursery: police
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Trump urges Bruce Springsteen boycott in social media rant
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US banks in Paris tighten security, order remote work over pro-Iran threat
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Israeli politicians, ex-security officials slam 'Jewish terrorism' in West Bank
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Bashir retains England 'ambition' despite Ashes snub
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US trade deficit widens less than forecast as tariff turmoil persists
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UEFA chief Ceferin warns Italy could lose Euro 2032 without stadium improvements
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Italy's football chief resigns after World Cup disaster
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Edoardo Molinari named European vice-captain for Ryder Cup
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'Extraordinary news': Dutch recover stolen gold Romanian helmet
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France considers reform for New Caledonia
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UK foreign minister stresses 'urgent need' to reopen Hormuz strait
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Macron says Trump marriage jibe does not 'merit response'
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Russia will send second ship with oil to Cuba: minister
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Belgian bishop takes on Vatican with push to ordain married men
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Oil rallies, stocks drop as Trump dampens Mideast hopes
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Nexperia's China unit nears fully local production of chips: company sources
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Indonesia issues fresh summons for Google, Meta over teen social media ban
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Japan axe coach Nielsen 12 days after winning Women's Asian Cup
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French President Macron lands in South Korea after Japan visit
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India's says defence exports hit 'all-time high' of $4 bn
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Nielsen leaves as Japan coach weeks after winning Women's Asian Cup
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Too bright: Seoul to dim digital billboards after complaints
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Iran vows 'crushing' attacks on US after Trump threats
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Women's Asian Cup finalists accuse governing body over equal money
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French president Macron heads to South Korea after Japan visit
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Armenia's underground salt clinic at centre of alternative medicine debate
White House 2024: AI threatens to 'supercharge' disinformation
From fabricated images of Donald Trump's arrest to a video depicting a dystopian future under Joe Biden, the 2024 White House race faces a firehose of tech-enabled disinformation in what is widely billed as America's first AI election.
Campaigners on both sides of the US political aisle are harnessing advanced tools powered by artificial intelligence, which many tech experts view as a double-edged sword.
AI programs can clone in an instant a political figure's voice and create videos and text so seemingly real that voters could struggle to decipher truth from fiction, undermining trust in the electoral process.
At the same time, campaigns are likely to use the technology to boost operational efficiency in everything from voter database analysis to drafting fundraising emails.
A video released in June by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis's presidential campaign purported to show former president Trump embracing Anthony Fauci, a favorite Republican punching bag throughout the coronavirus pandemic.
AFP's factcheckers found the video used AI-generated images.
After Biden formally announced his reelection bid, the Republican Party in April released a video it said was an "AI-generated look into the country's possible future" if he wins.
It showed photo-realistic images of panic on Wall Street, China invading Taiwan, waves of immigrants overrunning border agents, and a military takeover of San Francisco amid dire crime.
Other campaign-related examples of AI imagery include fake photos of Trump being hauled away by New York police officers and video of Biden declaring a national draft to support Ukraine's war effort against Russia.
- 'Wild West' -
"Generative AI threatens to supercharge online disinformation campaigns," the nonprofit Freedom House said in a recent report, warning that the technology was already being used to smear electoral opponents in the United States.
"Purveyors of disinformation are employing AI-generated images, audio, and text, making the truth easier to distort and harder to discern."
More than 50 percent of Americans expect AI-enabled falsehoods will impact the outcome of the 2024 election, according to a poll published in September by the media group Axios and business intelligence firm Morning Consult.
About one-third of Americans said they will be less trusting of the results because of AI, according to the poll.
In a hyperpolarized political environment, observers warn such sentiments risk stoking public anger at the election process -- akin to the January 6, 2021 assault on the US Capitol by Trump supporters over false allegations that the 2020 election was stolen from him.
"Through (AI) templates that are easy and inexpensive to use, we are going to face a Wild West of campaign claims and counter-claims, with limited ability to distinguish fake from real material and uncertainty regarding how these appeals will affect the election," said Darrell West from the Brookings Institution.
- 'Game changing' -
At the same time, rapid AI advancements have also made it a "game changing" resource for understanding voters and campaign trends at a "very granular level", said Vance Reavie, chief executive of Junction AI.
Campaign staff previously relied on expensive consultants to develop outreach plans and spent hours on drafting speeches, talking points and social media posts, but AI has made the same jobs possible within a fraction of that time, Reavie told AFP.
But underscoring the potential for abuse, when AFP directed the AI-powered ChatGPT to create a campaign newsletter in favor of Trump, feeding it the former president's false statements debunked by US fact-checkers, it produced -- within seconds -- a slick campaign document with those falsehoods.
When AFP further prompted the chatbot to make the newsletter "angrier," it regurgitated the same falsehoods in a more apocalyptic tone.
Authorities are scrambling to set up guardrails for AI, with several US states such as Minnesota passing legislation to criminalize deepfakes aimed at hurting political candidates or influencing elections.
On Monday, Biden signed an ambitious executive order to promote the "safe, secure and trustworthy" use of AI.
"Deep fakes use AI-generated audio and video to smear reputations... spread fake news, and commit fraud," Biden said at the signing of the order.
He voiced concern that fraudsters could take a three-second recording of someone's voice to generate an audio deepfake.
"I've watched one of me," he said.
"I said, 'When the hell did I say that?'"
P.Anderson--BTB