California attorney general warns tech platforms to look out for voter deception ahead of election

California attorney general warns tech platforms to look out for voter deception ahead of election


California Attorney General Rob Bonta discusses Michelle Mack’s case in an interview on Feb. 16, 2024.

CNBC

California Attorney General Rob Bonta cautioned executives at social media and other tech companies to work harder to protect voters from “deception, intimidation, and dissuasion,” ahead of the November election.

“Millions of Californians rely on social media and artificial intelligence services to obtain news and information about upcoming elections, and it is paramount that the platforms, products, and services offered by your companies not be misused to deceive voters about their constitutional right to vote,” Bonta wrote in a letter Wednesday to the CEOs of Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Reddit, TikTok, X and YouTube.

The letter reviewed sections of California law that prohibit interference with voting rights by misleading people about voting place and time and by using intimidation tactics.

California state law also “generally prohibits the distribution, within 60 days of an election, and with actual malice, of materially deceptive audio or visual media of a candidate appearing on the ballot in the election with the intent to injure the candidate’s reputation or to deceive a voter into voting for or against the candidate,” Bonta wrote.

The letter follows pop icon Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris for president on Tuesday night following the debate. Swift criticized those who had circulated AI-generated images falsely stating that she had endorsed Donald Trump.

Trump had shared a series of those images on his Truth Social platform. Separately, X owner Elon Musk recently shared an AI-generated image portraying Harris dressed as a communist dictator.

“Kamala vows to be a communist dictator on day one,” Musk, who has endorsed Trump, wrote in a post on X on Sept. 2 “Can you believe she wears that outfit!?”

Google’s Gemini, OpenAI’s Dall-E and Chat GPT, Microsoft copilot and Grok, made by Musk’s xAI, allow users to rapidly generate images and text in response to prompts or questions. In August, an updated version of xAI’s product, Grok-2, appeared to carry few limitations on creating fake images of political figures.

WATCH: The generative AI trade

The generative AI trade: Markets are turning sour on chips



Source

Wall Street wrote off Palantir as too expensive. Retail investors can’t get enough
Technology

Wall Street wrote off Palantir as too expensive. Retail investors can’t get enough

Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images Kyle Dijamco is a proud member of Palantir Technologies‘ fast-growing retail investor base. The Los Angeles-based marketer has bet big on the defense tech stock, even increasing his exposure after a drawdown earlier this year. The 31-year-old’s position now stands at roughly $25,000. “It’s an exciting stock to […]

Read More
Exclusive: Nvidia buying AI chip startup Groq for about  billion in its largest acquisition on record
Technology

Exclusive: Nvidia buying AI chip startup Groq for about $20 billion in its largest acquisition on record

Jonathan Ross, chief executive officer of Groq Inc., during the GenAI Summit in San Francisco, California, US, on Thursday, May 30, 2024. David Paul | Bloomberg | Getty Images Nvidia has agreed to buy Groq, a designer of high-performance artificial intelligence accelerator chips, for $20 billion in cash, according to Alex Davis, CEO of Disruptive, […]

Read More
Here’s what would it take for an Amazon stock comeback in 2026
Technology

Here’s what would it take for an Amazon stock comeback in 2026

After a year defined by worries about cloud growth and tariff impact on retail, Amazon stock heads into 2026 poised for gains. The Club name struggled throughout 2025 as Wall Street worried that Microsoft ‘s Azure and Google Cloud were outpacing the growth rate of the No. 1 cloud, Amazon Web Services, and how President […]

Read More