Over the last month, some Spanish-speaking New Yorkers got a recorded phone call from Mayor Eric Adams speaking their native language. “Hola, soy el alcalde Eric Adams,” the mayor says in a monotone but flawless accent, before launching into a pitch for jobs with the city government. The truth is Adams isn’t multilingual, but he is a pioneer in the AI politics race.

In October, the mayor’s office said he’s been using AI to blast his constituents with millions of robocalls in languages he doesn’t speak, including Yiddish, Spanish, Mandarin, Haitian Creole, and Cantonese.

  • @WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    541 year ago

    Maybe I’m old fashioned, but I would be offended to get an AI robocall from a politician, and it would make me less likely to vote for them, even if they were from the party I support.

    • @burliman@lemm.ee
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      101 year ago

      Even if that politician called me personally I would feel this way. This is a statement about robocalls more than about AI.

      However if they had a ChatGPT style interface for asking them in depth policy questions that would answer as they would answer, I would be all fucking in. That would be awesome.

    • @olicvb@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      Right now it’s not as bad, but soon we wont be able to tell whether robocalls are humans or not.

      I guess we can resort to having the one on the other line say stuff they shouldn’t be able to as an AI (I.E the classic “say penis x3 if you are human”)

      • @WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        51 year ago

        I think I’d be able to tell it was fake if Ted Cruz rang to call me by name and give me a message in Swahili, no matter how convincing his tone may be.