Georgians need safeguards from AI-generated campaign ads, chatbots, and misinformation. The biggest hurdle for states may be President Donald Trump.
Opinion
16don MSNOpinion
The use of AI-generated deepfakes in campaign ads: Lying is the problem, not AI
AI generated videos and images are being used to spread misinformation in political campaigns, but the problem is not AI itself, but the lying and deception that is used to manipulate voters.
Review sources with skepticism, and consider whether a particular image or video confirms preexisting — potentially controversial — beliefs, experts advise.
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Scoop: Senate GOP hits Ossoff over shutdown
The Senate GOP campaign arm is going up Wednesday morning with a new ad slamming Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) over the government shutdown. Why it matters: Less than 12 hours in, both parties are wasting ...
FIRST ON FOX: House Rep. Buddy Carter, R-Ga., is taking aim at Georgia's senior senator in a new ad highlighting the vulnerable Democrat's stance on transgender student athletes. Carter, who is ...
Georgia Congressman Buddy Carter, a six-term representative, has announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate. Carter, who has recently aligned himself with Donald Trump, is campaigning on a platform ...
A recent campaign ad in Georgia that used an AI generated video of Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) saying things he never said is appropriately getting attention because of the ethical questions it raises.
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