A woman in Washington, D.C., views a manipulated video on January 24, 2019, that changes what is said by former presidents Donald Trump and Barack Obama, illustrating how deepfake technology can deceive viewers.
Credit: Rob Lever / AFP / Getty

As 2024 approaches and with it the next U.S. presidential election, experts and advocates are warning about the impact that the spread of artificial intelligence technology will have on the amount and sophistication of misinformation directed at voters.

While falsehoods and conspiracy theories have circulated ahead of previous elections, 2024 marks the first time that it will be easy for anyone to access AI technology that could create a believable deepfake video, photo, or audio clip in seconds, The Associated Press reported Tuesday.

“I expect a tsunami of misinformation,” Oren Etzioni, n AI expert and University of Washington professor emeritus, told the AP. “I can’t prove that. I hope to be proven wrong. But the ingredients are there, and I am completely terrified.”

Subject matter experts told the AP that three factors made the 2024 election an especially perilous time for […]

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