Meta said on Wednesday it had found “likely AI-generated” content used deceptively on its Facebook and Instagram platforms, including comments praising Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza published below posts from global news organizations and U.S. lawmakers.
The social media company, in a quarterly security report, said the accounts posed as Jewish students, African Americans and other concerned citizens, targeting audiences in the United States and Canada. It attributed the campaign to Tel Aviv-based political marketing firm STOIC.
STOIC did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the allegations.
Why it’s important
While Meta has found basic profile photos generated by artificial intelligence in influence operations since 2019, the report is the first to disclose the use of text-based generative AI technology since it emerged in late 2022.
Researchers have fretted that generative AI, which can quickly and cheaply produce human-like text, imagery and audio, could lead to more effective disinformation campaigns and sway elections.
In a press call, Meta security executives said they removed the Israeli campaign early and did not think novel AI technologies had impeded their ability to disrupt influence networks, which are coordinated attempts to push messages.
Executives said they had not seen such networks deploying AI-generated imagery of politicians realistic enough to be confused for authentic photos.
Key quote
“There are several examples across these networks of how they use likely generative AI tooling to create content. Perhaps it gives them the ability to do that quicker or to do that with more volume. But it hasn’t really impacted our ability to detect them,” said Meta head of threat investigations Mike Dvilyanski.
By the numbers
The report highlighted six covert influence operations that Meta disrupted in the first quarter.
In addition to the STOIC network, Meta shut down an Iran-based network focused on the Israel-Hamas conflict, although it did not identify any use of generative AI in that campaign.
Context
Meta and other tech giants have grappled with how to address potential misuse of new AI technologies, especially in elections.
Researchers have found examples of image generators from companies including OpenAI and Microsoft producing photos with voting-related disinformation, despite those companies having policies against such content.
The companies have emphasized digital labeling systems to mark AI-generated content at the time of its creation, although the tools do not work on text and researchers have doubts about their effectiveness.
What’s next
Meta faces key tests of its defenses with elections in the European Union in early June and in the United States in November. (This story has been corrected to reflect that this is the first disclosure of text-based generative AI use, not of generative AI use altogether, in paragraph 4)
—Katie Paul, Reuters
Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii
Alte posturi din acest grup

Pinterest fans are nothing if not loyal. Many have spent years—sometimes decades—carefully curating boards filled with wedding inspiration, home decor ideas, fashion, and more. Now users are loggi

Instacart is launching a new stand-alone app called Fizz, designed for groups to order snacks and drinks ahead of parties for a flat $5 delivery fee.
The platform, developed in collabora

George Arison is telling me about a hookup.
Arison, the 47-year-old CEO of the LGBTQ dating app and social network Grindr, recalls an encounter with a man who ranked low in physical chem

Just two years ago, prompt engineering was hailed as a hot new job in tech. Now, it has all but disappeared.
At the beginning of the corporate AI boom, some companies sought out large la
Summoning a robotaxi from your phone is not a futuristic fantasy since Waymo achieved full commercial deployment.
https://www.fastcompany.com/91325288/goodbye-human-drivers-waymos-robotaxis-a

Haliey Welch, better known as the Hawk Tuah girl, is ready for a rebrand.
After being thrust into the spotlight in 2024, thanks to her now-iconic “Hawk Tuah” catchphrase—featured in a vi

Anthropic is turning to a Biden administration alum to run its new Beneficial Deployments team, which is tasked with helping extend the benefits of its AI to organizations focused on social good—p