File #: Res 0499-2024    Version: * Name: Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act.
Type: Resolution Status: Committee
Committee: Committee on Consumer and Worker Protection
On agenda: 7/18/2024
Enactment date: Law number:
Title: Resolution calling on the United States Congress to pass, and the President to sign, the Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act.
Sponsors: Rita C. Joseph, Amanda Farías, Alexa Avilés, Tiffany Cabán, Yusef Salaam, Chris Banks, Pierina Ana Sanchez, Justin L. Brannan, Gale A. Brewer, Althea V. Stevens
Council Member Sponsors: 10
Attachments: 1. Res. No. 499, 2. July 18, 2024 - Stated Meeting Agenda, 3. Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 7-18-24

Res. No. 499

 

Resolution calling on the United States Congress to pass, and the President to sign, the Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act.

 

By Council Members Joseph, Farías, Avilés, Cabán, Salaam, Banks, Sanchez, Brannan, Brewer and Stevens

 

Whereas, The advancement of generative artificial intelligence (AI) models has led to a significant increase in the creation of convincing “deepfakes,” or computationally created media that falsely represent reality; and

Whereas, It is difficult to tell real and AI-generated images, audio, and videos apart, and multiple studies have shown that people cannot reliably detect deepfakes; and

Whereas, Bad actors can use deepfakes to deceive, misrepresent, and influence people, and researchers at cybersecurity company Mandiant have documented a number of instances of illicit actors using AI and deepfake technology for phishing scams, misinformation, and other illicit purposes; and

Whereas, Deceptive deepfakes have robbed millions of dollars from companies and individuals worldwide, including scams involving parents getting calls from cloned versions of their child’s voice asking for money, according to a 2023 Bloomberg report; and

Whereas, Deepfake celebrity endorsements of various products and scams have proliferated in the past year, including ads in which a deepfake of Tom Hanks endorsed a dental insurance plan and a deepfake of Taylor Swift promoted a cookware giveaway, as reported by The New York Times; and

Whereas, Deepfakes are also being used to influence politics, including an audio recording featuring a voice deepfake of Manhattan Democratic leader and former state Assemblyman Keith Wright disparaging Harlem Assemblywoman Inez Dickens posted online in 2023; and

Whereas, AI-generated content has led to numerous instances of harm to minors, particularly through the sharing of fake sexually explicit media; and

Whereas, Clear labeling of AI-generated content would help protect New Yorkers from deception; and

Whereas, As part of the Fiscal Year 2025 state budget, New York amended section 14-106 of the Election Law to require any entity that distributes or publishes any political communication altered with AI technology that could reasonably be perceived as authentic include a disclaimer that the material has been manipulated; and

Whereas, The Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act, introduced in Congress by Representatives Anna Eshoo and Neal Dunn, attempts to mitigate the risks posed by deepfakes by requiring disclosures of all AI-generated content; and

Whereas, H.R.7766, the Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act, would direct the National Institute of Standards and Technology to facilitate the development of standards for identifying and labeling AI-generated content; and  

Whereas, The Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act would require generative AI developers to include machine-readable disclosures such as watermarks within content generated by their AI applications; and

Whereas, The Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act would require online platforms to use these disclosures to label AI-generated content; now, therefore, be it,

Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls on  the United States Congress to pass, and the President to sign, the Protecting Consumers from Deceptive AI Act.

 

NEM

LS 17103

7/11/24