FEC vice chair Ellen Weintraub on Thursday supported the May
proposal by U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, who asked the commission to
advance a proposed rule that would require disclosure of AI
content in both candidate and issue advertisements. FEC Chair
Sean Cooksey criticized the plan.
The proposal would not prohibit AI-generated content within
political ads.
There is growing concern in Washington that AI-generated content
could mislead voters in the November presidential and
congressional elections. The FCC said AI will probably play a
substantial role in 2024 political ads.
Rosenworcel singled out the potential for misleading "deep
fakes" or "altered images, videos, or audio recordings that
depict people doing or saying things that did not actually do or
say."
"It's about disclosure," Rosenworcel said Thursday, saying the
FCC since the 1930s has required disclosure and has ample legal
authority. "We have decades of experience with doing this."
Weintraub said in a letter to Rosenworcel that the "public would
benefit from greater transparency as to when AI-generated
content is being used in political advertisements."
She said it would be beneficial for both the FEC and FCC to
conduct regulatory efforts. "It’s time to act," Weintraub said.
But Cooksey said mandatory disclosures would "directly conflict
with existing law and regulations, and sow chaos among political
campaigns for the upcoming election."
The rule would require on-air and written disclosures and cover
cable operators, satellite TV and radio providers. The FCC does
not have authority to regulate internet or social media ads or
streaming services. The agency has already taken steps to combat
misleading use of AI in political robocalls.
Republican FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr criticized the proposal
saying the "FCC can only muddy the waters. AI-generated
political ads that run on broadcast TV will come with a
government-mandated disclaimer but the exact same or similar ad
that runs on a streaming service or social media site will not?"
Electoral AI content drew attention in January after a fake
robocall imitating President Joe Biden sought to dissuade people
from voting for him in New Hampshire's Democratic primary
election, prompting the state to file charges against a
Democratic political consultant behind the calls.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Leslie Adler and
David Gregorio)
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