A company that sent deceptive calls to New Hampshire voters using artificial intelligence to mimic President Joe Biden’s voice agreed Wednesday to pay a $1 million fine, federal regulators said.

Lingo Telecom, the voice service provider that transmitted the robocalls, agreed to the settlement to resolve enforcement action taken by the Federal Communications Commission, which had initially sought a $2 million fine.

The case is seen by many as an unsettling early example of how AI might be used to influence groups of voters and democracy as a whole.

Meanwhile Steve Kramer, a political consultant who orchestrated the calls, still faces a proposed $6 million FCC fine as well as state criminal charges.

  • citrusface
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    1121 days ago

    Even worse - the company is being treated better than the individual.

    • @1995ToyotaCorolla
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      521 days ago

      Until you start seeing fines like “20% of your yearly revenue” this shit is gonna keep happening. A $1M fine isn’t even a slap on the wrist to a telecom

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      120 days ago

      The company didn’t run the campaign. They didn’t know what was being transmitted. Their crime was being too trusting of their customer and signing off on the calls without enough scrutiny.

      • citrusface
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        120 days ago

        fair.

        i supposed them monitoring every transmission is overreach - but i feel like you have to have some safegaurds in place and know what your customers are doing… if someone is making masses of outbound calls, then i dunno. maybe that should have at least been QA’d.

        REGARDLESS - if you are going to levy a fine to a telecom, 1mil is still laughable.