House Administration Committee ranking member Joe Morelle, D-N.Y., urged the DOJ Monday to investigate reports “that a party or parties unknown are attempting to confuse and disenfranchise New Hampshire voters using AI-generated robocalls” impersonating President Joe Biden ahead of the state’s Tuesday presidential primary election. The office of New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella is investigating the robocall, in which an AI-generated voice mimicking Biden says that “it’s important that you save your vote for the November election” and that voting in the Tuesday primary “only enables the Republicans in their quest to elect Donald Trump again. Your vote makes a difference in November, not this Tuesday.” New Hampshire’s Tuesday Democratic contest is nonbinding, but the GOP primary will award 22 delegates to candidates on a proportional basis. “This clear bid to interfere in the New Hampshire primary demands a thorough investigation and a forceful response from federal officials to deter further AI-based attacks that will disrupt American democracy and disenfranchise American Voters,” Morelle said in a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland. “If Congress can strengthen law enforcement’s ability to detect and prevent AI-based attempts to subvert our elections, we look forward to working with you to identify and achieve any meaningful and well-defined standards to protect our democracy.” DOJ didn’t immediately comment.
The European Council last week established a new sanctions regime to target parties undermining democracy in Guatemala following the nation's 2023 elections. The regime will allow the EU to impose restrictions on people and entities "responsible for actions that undermine democracy, the rule of law and a peaceful transfer of power in Guatemala," the council said. Examples of sanctionable activity include intimidating public officials and "financial misconduct concerning public funds and the unauthorised export of capital."
The American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League, in separate amicus briefs Thursday before the U.S. Supreme Court, came to the defense of NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association in their efforts to defeat the Texas and Florida social media laws (dockets 22-277 and 22-555) on grounds that their content-moderation and other restrictions violate the First Amendment.
The Commerce Department recently introduced a new policy as part of its export promotion work that will formally require the International Trade Administration to determine whether any potential export assistance would contribute to human rights concerns, including assistance for shipments that could cause surveillance technology to be exported to human rights abusers. The agency outlined the new policy in an October letter to Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who asked Commerce in May to review its export assistance to companies that may sell “dangerous surveillance technology” in certain foreign markets (see 2305300025).
Sens. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, and John Kennedy, R-La., introduced legislation Tuesday that would require generative AI developers to disclose when their content is AI-generated. Schatz and several senators told us in interviews they believe AI can be regulated with or without the passage of a federal privacy law.
The U.S. Supreme Court granted the cert petitions of NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association challenging on First Amendment grounds the constitutionality of the Florida (docket 22-227) and Texas (docket 22-555) social media laws, said the court’s order list Friday.
Two members of the House of Representatives asked the House Ways and Means Committee to renew the Generalized System of Preferences benefits program, and several others also advocated for trade policies on the day that the committee welcomed other members to advocate for their priorities.
After a complaint from Casa Obrera del Bajio, a Mexican labor organization in Guanajuato state, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is asking Mexico to review whether workers at the Grupo Yakazi factory there were denied rights to freedom of association because of irregularities during the workers' vote in March on whether to retain the union that had been representing them.
A bill that says the Taiwan trade initiative can't take effect until the administration submits an economic analysis of its effects and answers questions from Congress on implementation has passed both chambers of Congress. The bill also says the next deal between Taiwan and the U.S. must gain congressional approval.
A bill that says the Taiwan trade initiative can't take effect until the administration submits an economic analysis of its effects and answers questions from Congress on implementation has passed both chambers of Congress. The bill also says the next deal between Taiwan and the U.S. must gain congressional approval.