I have a new column this week on OnlySky. It’s about whether AI is making it impossible for voters to trust anything they see or hear.
Zohran Mamdani, a socialist candidate for mayor of NYC, made waves when a Republican opponent accused him of using deepfake technology in his ads to pretend he was fluent in Spanish. It sounds too ridiculous to credit, but it’s just the cresting wave of a problem that’s only going to get bigger in coming years. What happens when anyone can create a perfect audio or video clone of anyone else on demand?
It’s not only that unethical politicians will use deepfakes to frame their opponents for things they didn’t do, although that tactic has already been tried. Just as troubling is the possibility that politicians who genuinely committed misdeeds will try to evade accountability by insisting their opponents are making deepfakes of them!
Read the excerpt below, then click through to see the full piece. This column is free to read, but paid members of OnlySky get some extra perks, like a subscriber-only newsletter:
This fits with what we know about human psychology. People with an ideological commitment excel at coming up with reasons to reject evidence that challenges their preconceptions. Young-earth creationists say that dinosaur bones were planted by Satan to test believers’ faith. Conspiracy theorists say that the omnipotent conspiracy plants false flags to lead the public astray. Even scientists, when defending a cherished hypothesis, can argue that contrary evidence is misinterpreted or won’t be replicated.
This is an extension of that trend into politics. The political arena has always been a domain of lies and exaggerations, but we may soon see untruth proliferating like never before. AI gives voters from across the political spectrum a ready-made excuse to wave away anything that casts doubt on their candidate.






