Publications /
Opinion

Back
Bracing for Black Swans: Artificial Intelligence and Elections in 2024
Authors
Nusrat Farooq
April 30, 2024

Nusrat Farooq is an international security and policy expert whose research is at the intersection of emerging technology, international relations, and trust and safety. She is a 2022 alumna of the Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders program. She can be reached at nusratfatooq.fnu@gmail.com. Learn more about her here.

 

Summary: With more than half of the global population across 78 countries participating in elections in 2024, and with artificial intelligence (AI) derived misinformation and disinformation identified as the foremost global risk factor in terms of election outcomes, multiple black-swan events--that are high impact and difficult to predict but inevitable--     can be anticipated. A few tech companies and governments have initiated coalitions and regulatory measures to combat AI misinformation in elections in 2024. However, the fight remains disproportionately challenging despite such initiatives. The primary antidote to these potential AI-driven misinformation black swans is not a handful of AI governance or tech solution measures; rather, it is ‘critical thinking.’

------

The year 2024 marks a pivotal moment in international affairs. With more than half of the global population across 78 countries participating in elections, and with artificial intelligence (AI) derived misinformation and disinformation identified as the foremost global risk factor, in terms of election outcomes, multiple black swan events--that are high impact and difficult to predict but inevitable--     can be anticipated this year. This apprehension is not solely about our understanding of AI’s role in elections but rather about the unknown factors and fallouts due to misuse of AI. While we comprehend what is visible, it’s the unseen force of AI during this election year that provokes concern. The primary antidote to these potential AI-driven misinformation black swans in 2024 is not AI governance or tech solutions; rather it is ‘critical thinking.’

Both AI governance regulations and tech solutions to counter AI misinformation require time, multiple iterations, and feedback from various stakeholders. These stakeholders include staff working at tech companies, users from different age groups across the globe, academics, policymakers, civil society, and others. For regulations to be effective, they should ideally be designed with long-term planning in mind, spanning five to ten years. Similarly, robust tech solutions, initially conceived as quick fixes, may not address the broad spectrum of AI-election content-related issues, particularly those that are currently unknown—issues that have become apparent over the last year.

One such issue arose in Slovakia during elections in September 2023. During the 48-hour moratorium preceding the opening of voting, when media outlets and politicians are expected to remain silent, an audio recording was posted on Facebook. In the recording, Michal Šimečka, the leader of the liberal Progressive Slovakia party, and Monika Tódová, a journalist with the daily newspaper Denník N, were purportedly heard discussing the rigging of the election by purchasing votes from the marginalized Roma minority in the country. Although both Michal and Monika promptly denounced the audio as fake, it proved hard to debunk its authenticity within the 48-hour moratorium period. The election resulted in Progressive Slovakia losing      to SMER-SSD (Direction-Slovak Social Democracy), a party known for its populist views, which campaigned for the withdrawal of military support for its neighbor, Ukraine.

The causality regarding whether the deepfake audio benefited one party over the other in the Slovakian elections, and by what margin, remains contested. What is noteworthy, however, is that the quick-fix technology created for addressing such misinformation could not be applied in this case. Meta’s Manipulated-Media policy only covered videos. The Slovakian case exploited a loophole in Meta’s policy, which does not extend to audio content. This observation is not a criticism directed at Meta, but underscores a broader technological limitation shared by all tech companies, in regards to their current helplessness to effectively contain or control AI-driven election black swans. In fact, no single stakeholder possesses the capability to be able to grapple with the spread of misinformation. Therefore, addressing AI-election-related black swan events in 2024 requires a collective effort, and is not solely incumbent upon tech companies.

Jacinda Ardern, the former Prime Minister of New Zealand, is one of the foremost proponents of large-scale collaboration, exemplified by initiatives such as the Christchurch Call, which she co-founded. Presently, she serves as the New Zealand Prime Minister’s special envoy for this endeavor. In her article published in the Washington Post in June 2023, she advocated for “collaboration on AI as the only option,” emphasizing that “technology is evolving too quickly for any single regulatory fix.” She further asserted that “government alone can’t do the job; the responsibility is everyone’s, including those who develop AI in the first place.”

A few tech companies and governments have initiated tech coalitions and regulatory measures to combat AI misinformation in elections in 2024. For example, on February 16, 2024, at the Munich Security Conference (MSC), a group of 20 leading tech companies—including Microsoft, Meta, Google, Amazon, IBM, Adobe, OpenAI, Anthropic, Stability AI, TikTok, and X—announced an accord to counter video, audio, and image deepfakes during the upcoming elections. Additionally, on March 13, 2024, the European Union passed its Artificial Intelligence Act, aimed at safeguarding general-purpose AI, prohibiting the use of AI to exploit user vulnerabilities, and granting consumers the right to lodge complaints and receive meaningful explanations.

Despite such initiatives, the fight against AI election misinformation remains disproportionately challenging. According to data from Clarity, a machine-learning firm, the number of deepfakes created is increasing by 900% year over year. Collaboration between a handful of governments and tech companies alone cannot solve this issue. Solid and robust solutions to combat AI election misinformation in 2024 and beyond will require time. Building resilience against AI-induced black swans is paramount, and critical thinking—with individuals learning to discern fake from real—is key. This collective fight emphasizes the crucial role of every single voter’s critical thinking capacity in this election year, which could be marked by multiple AI-derived black swans.

Practicing and deepening critical thinking involves approaching suspicious content with skepticism, avoiding immediate belief, and investigating further by asking questions and cross-referencing information from multiple reputable sources. While organizations such as Newsguard, Demagog, Alt-News assist in discerning misinformation, their efforts are limited. Ultimately, it falls on individual users to actively educate themselves and remain vigilant. Governments and tech companies, while important players, are not fully equipped to counter these black swans.

Predicting the exact form of AI-derived election misinformation black swan events is challenging, but their inevitability in this crucial election year is apparent. In hindsight, when we ponder what our rationalization should have been to counter these black swans, individual critical thinking is what it will primarily come down to. So why not apply it today rather than ponder upon it after the damage is done?

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Mohammed Germouni
    April 10, 2020
    Dans cette période de catastrophe planétaire, le risque d'un nombre élevé de victimes en raison de la faiblesse des systèmes de santé de nombreux Etats africains, anglophones ou francophones, est plus qu’évident pour l’observateur averti. Les circonstances actuelles interdisent des commentaires évidemment superflus sur les infrastructures médicales, globalement défaillantes. Ces insuffisances sont connues et vécues au quotidien par les populations des diverses régions du continent, ...
  • Authors
    Salma Daoudi
    April 8, 2020
    The coronavirus pandemic represents a turning point in security studies, shedding light on the importance of the health of populations for sustaining the political, economic, and social health of the nation-state. Playing a role akin to the 9/11 events in propelling terrorism at the forefront of the global security agenda, COVID-19 reshuffles national security priorities. As such, the securitization of health has allowed the implementation of drastic exceptional measures aimed at co ...
  • Authors
    April 7, 2020
    Le monde : ‘’Une société de crise’’ La multiplication de catastrophes naturelles et la montée de leur probabilité d’occurrence, la répétition des crises de tous genres (économiques, politiques, sociales et sécuritaires) et l’interdépendance accrue, du fait de la mondialisation, ont mis au premier plan le facteur de la résilience[1]. En effet, il ne s’agit plus d’évaluer le risque ou de l’anticiper, tellement sa probabilité d’occurrence s’est accrue, mais surtout de limiter les dégâ ...
  • Authors
    March 30, 2020
    */ Depuis le 12 mars, les frontières et les communications aériennes, maritimes et terrestres entre l’Espagne et le Maroc sont fermées à cause de la crise du COVID-19. Mais au-delà de la fermeture transitoire des frontières, la crise sanitaire, doublée de la crise économique qui se laisse déjà ressentir en Espagne, aura un fort impact sur un million de ressortissants marocains résidant en Espagne. Au 1er janvier 2019 (derniers chiffres officiels disponibles), leur nombre était de 8 ...
  • March 25, 2020
    A feeling of collective insanity has overtaken the world since the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-2019) emerged in Wuhan, China. The virus—more lethal than influenza—was initially treated lightly by the West. This approach showed the lack of preparedness of many countries in dealing with the epidemics we are currently facing. Instead of implementing immediate measures to deal with the challenges imposed, some political and business leaders started labeling COVID-19 as the Chinese v ...
  • Authors
    Salma Daoudi
    February 25, 2020
    Epidemics are hardly a novelty. They have been shaping, mapping, and fundamentally altering human history from time immemorial. Exposing national vulnerabilities and feeding off poverty and insecurity, diseases have consistently threatened human and homeland security. Paradoxically, while globalization has helped concentrate global scientific efforts and disseminate ever more rapidly technologies and knowledge production, it has also significantly increased global interconnectednes ...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    February 20, 2020
    This young German man with Congolese origins, educated in Germany, the United States and the Netherlands, has roots on three continents. He’s not only the epitomy of an Atlantic young leader – the way the Policy Center for the New South defines them – but now also a member of the 2019 ADEL cohort Alumni. In January 2020 he transitioned as Head of Public Policy for Sub-Saharan Africa at Twitter. At this strategic position, he works for one of the most influential social media networ ...
  • Authors
    Leonardo Parraga
    September 5, 2019
    Leonardo Parraga is an alumnus of the Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders Program 2016.  The rise of globalization has given space to cooperation across borders in unprecedented ways. The interconnectedness between different actors allows for the creation of synergies and catalyzing progress in different areas, a feature that was previously unthinkable. When it comes to cooperation amongst young people, the increasing wave of meeting spaces facilitating the encounters between youth ...
  • Authors
    Rumbidzai Chisenga
    July 23, 2019
    The author is an alumna of the Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders Program 2017.  “Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for 13.5% of the global population but less than 1% of global research output” – this is according to a 2018 research article co-authored by eight Vice Chancellors of African universities. The state of knowledge production in sub Saharan Africa is sobering to say the least, and even more so in light of the bold ambitions the continent has for the future, ambitions such as ...
  • Authors
    Naakoshie Mills
    May 31, 2019
    The author is an alumnus of the 2016 Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders program People centered development is the crux of the African Union’s (AU) new Agenda 2063 initiative. Its overall goal is a Pan African transformation and development of its member countries, while reframing the continent’s presence on the global stage. Fortunately, women’s equality is one of its aims, addressing discrimination, gender-based violence, and empowerment, to name a few. As developed nations like ...