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New York’s mayor has admitted using audio deepfakes to call residents in languages he doesn’t speak.
Eric Adams has been heard speaking Spanish and Mandarin thanks to the technology, which he said was a way to reach more people.
Speaking at a news briefing (in English), the Democrat said the “robocalls” were used to promote local events like recruitment fairs and concerts.
The self-described “techie” insisted he had enjoyed positive feedback from residents, saying some he’d spoken to were “excited” to hear their mayor in their own language.
“We are becoming more welcoming by using technology to speak a multitude of languages,” he added.
“To all, all I can say is ni hao (Mandarin for hello),” is how he cheekily signed off the conference, having been asked whether the phone calls were potentially misleading people.
Local news outlet The City reports more than four million people have been reached by the calls so far, including thousands in Spanish and hundreds in Yiddish, Mandarin, and Cantonese.
They are generated using voice tech firm ElevenLabs, which was left embarrassed earlier this year when its software was used to generate celebrity voices reading inappropriate statements.
Spotify is experimenting with similar tools to translate podcasts into other languages.
‘Deeply unethical’
Following the news conference, the mayor was criticised by campaigners who described the calls as “unethical”, as they don’t include any clarification that the voice is artificially generated.
Albert Fox Cahn, from the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, said it was a “creepy vanity project”.
“The mayor is making deep fakes of himself,” he said.
“This is deeply unethical, especially on the taxpayer’s dime. Using AI to convince New Yorkers that he speaks languages that he doesn’t is deeply Orwellian.”
Read more:
Twelve AI problems that ‘must be addressed’
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