AI is already permeating politics — and it’s time to put rules in place, experts say
OTTAWA — A woman in a grey-brown shirt sits next to a man, looking like she could be listening intently to someone out of frame. She has her arms crossed on a table — but also a third arm, clothed in plaid, propping up her chin.
Voters did a double take as they looked through a Toronto mayoral candidate’s platform last summer and saw an image of the mysterious three-armed woman.
It was an obvious tell that Anthony Furey’s team had used artificial intelligence — and amid much public snickering, they confirmed it.
The snafu was a high-profile example of how AI is coming into play in Canadian politics.