South Korea hosted summit warns of AI risks to democracy
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[March 18, 2024]
By Ju-min Park and Jack Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Monday called
fake news and disinformation based on AI and digital technology threats
to democracy, as some officials attending a global summit accused Russia
and China of conducting malicious propaganda campaigns.
Speaking at the opening of the Summit for Democracy being held in Seoul,
Yoon said countries had a duty to share experiences and wisdom so that
artificial intelligence and technology could be employed to promote
democracy.
"Fake news and disinformation based on artificial intelligence and
digital technology not only violates individual freedom and human rights
but also threatens democratic systems," Yoon said.
South Korea is hosting the third Summit for Democracy conference, an
initiative of U.S. President Joe Biden aimed at discussing ways to stop
democratic backsliding and erosion of rights and freedoms.
Digital threats to democracy, and how technology can promote democracy
and universal human rights, are expected to be the main agenda of the
three-day meetings, attended by representatives from more than 30
countries, ranging from Costa Rica to the United States and Ghana.
"As authoritarian and repressive regimes deploy technologies to
undermine democracy and human rights, we need to ensure that technology
sustains and supports democratic values and norms," U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken told the summit.
Blinken later said 2024 was an "extraordinary election year" to
highlight risks of disinformation and falsehoods in cyberspace. He also
repeated Washington's accusations that Russia and China are behind
global campaigns aimed at manipulating information.
Some European officials also accused Russia of conducting disinformation
campaigns using AI.
"The only thing more gruesome than the Russian actions during their
ongoing invasion of Ukraine is the disgusting web of lies spun by
Russian propaganda, accelerated by social media, deep fake techniques
and omnipresent bots," said Robert Kupiecki, undersecretary of state at
Poland's foreign ministry.
The Kremlin has repeatedly denied accusations of spreading false or
misleading information.
A spokesperson for China's embassy in Washington had said it was
"typical bias and double standard to allege that the pro-China contents
and reports are 'disinformation', and to call the anti-China ones 'true
information'".
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South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol speaks during an opening
ceremony for the 3rd Summit for Democracy in Seoul, South Korea 18
March 2024. KIM MIN-HEE/Pool via REUTERS
Hours before the summit started, North Korea fired several
short-range ballistic missiles into the sea for the first time in
two months in its latest show of force.
The conference also kicked off just after Russian President Vladimir
Putin was declared victor in a record post-Soviet landslide in a
presidential election on Sunday.
The result means Putin, who rose to power in 1999, is set to start a
new six-year term that will see him overtake Josef Stalin and become
Russia's longest-serving leader in more than 200 years if he
completes it.
A White House National Security Council spokesperson criticised the
election and said they were "obviously not free nor fair given how
Mr. Putin has imprisoned political opponents and prevented others
from running against him".
Putin told reporters he regarded Russia's election as democratic and
said protests organised by supporters of opposition leader Alexei
Navalny, who died in an Arctic prison last month, against him had no
effect on the election's outcome.
The democracy summit is also being attended by British Deputy Prime
Minister Oliver Dowden, who said democracy faced threats on multiple
fronts, including cyberattackers disrupting campaigns, populists
embracing falsehoods, and "autocrats holding sham elections."
Blinken said Washington was releasing the first guidance of its kind
for tech companies to help prevent attacks on human rights defenders
online.
In addition, he said at the summit that a half-dozen more countries,
including South Korea and Japan, were joining a U.S.-led crackdown
on the misuse of commercial spyware to surveil journalists or human
rights defenders.
(Reporting by Jack Kim and Ju-min ParkEditing by Ed Davies and Gerry
Doyle)
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