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Iran hacking Trump? AI deepfakes? Cyber side of 2024 election heats up.

Everybody knew artificial intelligence would play a role in this year’s election, but not quite this way.

On Sunday, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump falsely claimed that Democratic opponent Kamala Harris had used AI tools to fabricate the size of crowds at her rallies.

Why We Wrote This

Recent days have seen false allegations of AI meddling, actual AI meddling, and reports of old-style hacking all involving the U.S. election campaign. Yet so far, this election’s cyberchaos may be less impactful than experts worried.

Whether it’s accusations of altering videos when they can be so easily disproved or surprise findings that AI-aided fake political news is having only mixed success, 2024 is not turning out the way cybersecurity specialists expected. AI influence campaigns were supposed to be smarter and subtler than what has happened so far in elections stretching from Indonesia to the United States.

Cybermeddlers are still making trouble. Yet they appear to be relying on traditional tactics more than on AI. In the latest example, Iranian hackers may have stolen information from the Trump campaign.

This week’s false claim by Mr. Trump and its amplification on social media highlight what some cybersecurity experts have long said: Although the use of AI deep fakes is growing, the best way to combat malign cyberinfluence in elections is to clamp down on its distribution.

Says Oren Etzioni, founder of TrueMedia.org, “It’s not the number of fakes [that matters]; it’s their impact.”

Everybody knew artificial intelligence would play a role in this year’s election, but not quite this way.

On Sunday, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump falsely claimed that Democratic opponent Kamala Harris had used AI tools to fabricate the size of crowds at her rallies. Media outlets, including the local Fox TV affiliate that live-streamed a large Detroit airport event, debunked the former president’s social media post.

Whether it is candidates accusing opponents of altering videos when it can be so easily disproved or surprise findings that AI-aided fake political news is having only mixed success, 2024 is not turning out the way cybersecurity specialists expected. AI influence campaigns were supposed to be smarter and more subtle than what has happened so far in elections stretching from Indonesia to the United States.

Why We Wrote This

Recent days have seen false allegations of AI meddling, actual AI meddling, and reports of old-style hacking all involving the U.S. election campaign. Yet so far, this election’s cyberchaos may be less impactful than experts worried.

Cyber meddlers are still making trouble. Yet they appear to be relying on traditional tactics more than on AI. In the latest example, Iranian hackers may have stolen information from the Trump campaign.

This week’s false claim about Harris rally attendance and its amplification on social media highlight what some cybersecurity experts have long said: Although the use of AI deepfakes is growing, the best way to combat malign cyber influence in elections is to clamp down on its distribution.

“The one thing I want to fix? It’s the problem of the last 20 years: social media,” says Hany Farid, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and pioneer in digital forensics and image analysis. “If I could create deepfakes of Biden and Trump and all I could do was mail it to my five friends, that’s really different than if I can cover Twitter and YouTube and TikTok with it.” 

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