• Tuesday, May 14, 2024

India 2024 general elections

Google, India poll commission to help with access to key voting details

The search engine has also implemented strategies to combat dissemination of misinformation.

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Representational Image (Photo by NOAH SEELAM/AFP via Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

GOOGLE, owned by Alphabet Inc, has partnered with the Election Commission of India (ECI) to promote credible information and facilitate easy access to essential voting details on Google Search and YouTube. Additionally, the search engine has implemented strategies to combat dissemination of misinformation and accurately label AI-generated content during the forthcoming general elections in India, as stated in a blog post on Tuesday (12).

“We are collaborating with ECI to enable people to easily discover critical voting information on Google Search – such as how to register and how to vote – in both English and Hindi,” Google said.

It said that for news and information related to the upcoming election, YouTube’s recommendation system prominently surfaces content from authoritative sources on the YouTube homepage, in search results, and highlights high-quality content from authoritative news sources.

Read: India election commissioner quits ahead of vote, opposition cry foul

Additionally, Google said it is setting up processes to help audiences identify AI-generated content.

“As more advertisers leverage the power and opportunity of AI, we want to make sure we continue to provide people with greater transparency and the information they need to make informed decisions. Our ads policies already prohibit the use of manipulated media to mislead people, like deepfakes or doctored content,” it said.

Read: India opposition party fields 2 World Cup-winning cricketers for 2024 elections

Google has commenced the display of labels for content generated using YouTube’s AI features, such as Dream Screen.

“Soon, YouTube will begin to require creators to disclose when they’ve created realistic altered or synthetic content, and will display a label that indicates for people when they’re watching this content,” it said.

The blog post further said the company has begun to roll out restrictions on the types of election-related queries for which Gemini will return responses.

The popular search engine said they have set policies around demonstrably false claims in areas like manipulated content, incitement to violence, hate speech, and harassment, that could undermine democratic processes.

Google has set strict policies and restrictions around who can run election-related advertising on its platforms. These include identity verification, certification and authorisation by the ECI, and financier disclosures.

“We take our responsibility for providing high-quality information for these types of queries seriously, and are continuously working to improve our protections,” the blog post said.

Google said it has recently joined the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA), and pledged to help prevent deceptive AI-generated imagery, audio or video content from interfering with this year’s global elections.

Earlier, Google had introduced the Google News Initiative Training Network and the Fact Check Explorer tool to enable newsrooms and journalists to deliver reliable, fact-checked updates to debunk misinformation.

Additionally, Google is supporting Shakti, India Election Fact-Checking Collective, which is a consortium of news publishers and fact-checkers in India working together to aid the early detection of online misinformation, including deepfakes, and to create a common repository that news publishers can use to tackle the challenges of misinformation at scale.

“Google is committed to working with government, industry, and civil society and surface and connect voters to authoritative and helpful information online,” the blog post said.

(With PTI inputs)

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