“For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong”*…

… Still, we try. Consider the elections on the horizon in the U.S., the mid-terms later this year and the general in 2028: President Trump, who has mused that “we shouldn’t even have an election” in 2026, recently (again) threatened to impose the Insurrection Act, which many believe could be a step toward suspension on the vote.

But even if the polls go ahead as planned, emerging AI technologies are entangling with our crisis in democracy. Rachel George and Ian Klaus (of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) weigh in on both the dangers and the potential upsides with a useful “map” of the issues. From their executive summary..

  • AI poses substantial threats and opportunities for democracy in an important year ahead for global democracy. Despite the threats, AI technologies can also improve representative politics, citizen participation, and governance.
  • AI influences democracy through multiple entry points, including elections, citizen deliberation, government services, and social cohesion, all of which are influenced by geopolitics and security. All of these domains, mapped in this paper, face threats related to influence, integrity, and bias, yet also present opportunities for targeted interventions.
  • The current field of interventions at the intersection of AI and democracy is diverse, fragmented, and boutique. Not all AI interventions with the potential to influence democracy are framed as “democracy work” [e.g., mis-/dis-information and election administration], demonstrating the imperative for democracy advocates to widen the rhetorical aperture and to continue to map, identify, and scale interventions.
  • Diverse actors who are relevant to the connections between AI and democracy require tailored expertise and guardrails to maximize benefits and reduce harms. We present four prominent constellations of actors who operate at the AI–democracy intersection: policy-led, technology-enabled; politics-led, technology-enabled; civil society–led, technology-enabled; and technology-led, policy-deployed. Though each brings advantages, policy-led and technology-led interventions tend to have access to resources and innovation capacity in ways that enable more immediate and sizable impacts…

The full report: “AI and Democracy: Mapping the Intersections,” from @carnegieendowment.org.

* H. L. Mencken

###

As we fumble with our franchise, we might recall that it was on this date in 1966 that The 13th Floor Elevators (led by the now-legendary Roky Erikson) released their first single, the now-classic “You’re Gonna Miss Me.”

https://youtu.be/E5ChfmIkgNE?si=YvVYEkkYnbiChTAH

#13thFloorElevators #AI #artificialIntelligence #culture #democracy #elections #history #politics #RokyErikson #society #Technology #YouReGonnaMissMe

#JukeboxFridayNight
#HitAndMiss

#ThirteenthFloorElevators
#YoureGonnaMissMe

You're gonna wake up one morning as the sun greets the dawn
You're gonna look around in your mind, girl, you're gonna find that I'm gone
You didn't realize
Oh, you're gonna miss me, baby

https://youtu.be/ZClJYCZp1SI?si=-re1bABOxhmMrGrg

NEW * You're Gonna Miss Me - The 13th Floor Elevators {Stereo} 1966

YouTube
Faust si salvò a Pasqua e Gesù, citando il maestro Roky Erickson, disse: “You’re gonna miss me babe”.
#pasqua #goethe #faust #rokyerickson #youregonnamissme