United States | Mr Bot goes to Washington

AI will change American elections, but not in the obvious way

How polarisation inoculates Americans against misinformation

A politician at the lectern surrounded by computer windows and icons
Image: Tomasz Wozniakowski
|SAN FRANCISCO AND WASHINGTON, DC

THE day before Chicago’s mayoral election in February, a recording began circulating online. It was first posted on Twitter (now X) by a newly created account called Chicago Lakefront News. It featured what sounded like Paul Vallas, the law-and-order candidate, bemoaning all the fuss about police brutality and harking back to a halcyon time when cops could kill suspects by the dozen “and no one would bat an eye”. It was political dynamite and was quickly shared by thousands. But the voice in the recording was not Mr Vallas’s, nor any human’s: it was a “deepfake”, generated by artificial-intelligence (AI) software, which had been trained to mimic the sound of Mr Vallas’s voice.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Mr Bot goes to Washington”

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