The Prague Post - AI content proliferates in Hungary ahead of next year's elections

EUR -
AED 4.305189
AFN 76.774897
ALL 97.462488
AMD 444.4849
ANG 2.098213
AOA 1073.674289
ARS 1681.145995
AUD 1.740104
AWG 2.109841
AZN 1.992892
BAM 1.952633
BBD 2.359672
BDT 143.317526
BGN 1.968446
BHD 0.441896
BIF 3457.794396
BMD 1.172134
BND 1.502244
BOB 8.095557
BRL 6.300688
BSD 1.1716
BTN 106.520216
BWP 15.656003
BYN 3.377279
BYR 22973.820394
BZD 2.356168
CAD 1.621254
CDF 2525.947526
CHF 0.926132
CLF 0.026283
CLP 1037.783782
CNY 8.159455
CNH 8.153532
COP 4307.462389
CRC 571.249015
CUC 1.172134
CUP 31.061543
CVE 111.117862
CZK 24.33807
DJF 208.311846
DKK 7.470943
DOP 73.785535
DZD 152.127979
EGP 55.641413
ERN 17.582005
ETB 182.44279
FJD 2.657989
FKP 0.872904
GBP 0.872513
GEL 3.153331
GGP 0.872904
GHS 12.711814
GIP 0.872904
GMD 86.153479
GNF 10256.169418
GTQ 8.983428
GYD 245.100923
HKD 9.142349
HNL 31.072946
HRK 7.536348
HTG 153.371218
HUF 385.110974
IDR 19890.698533
ILS 3.707629
IMP 0.872904
INR 106.772413
IQD 1535.495139
IRR 49376.132026
ISK 146.199737
JEP 0.872904
JMD 184.480756
JOD 0.831026
JPY 185.440341
KES 151.146621
KGS 102.503133
KHR 4718.425452
KMF 492.296783
KPW 1054.907704
KRW 1735.625068
KWD 0.360443
KYD 0.976279
KZT 595.146692
LAK 25323.948455
LBP 102620.304532
LKR 362.825986
LRD 216.756859
LSL 19.258433
LTL 3.461006
LVL 0.709012
LYD 6.358806
MAD 10.763119
MDL 19.95786
MGA 5339.068904
MKD 61.573713
MMK 2461.522996
MNT 4176.961133
MOP 9.409597
MRU 46.603932
MUR 54.140783
MVR 18.109528
MWK 2031.895689
MXN 20.62733
MYR 4.752416
MZN 74.911255
NAD 19.258487
NGN 1662.765841
NIO 42.958622
NOK 11.714181
NPR 170.432546
NZD 2.009811
OMR 0.450692
PAB 1.171545
PEN 3.935441
PGK 4.915954
PHP 69.591335
PKR 328.109523
PLN 4.22478
PYG 7824.308267
QAR 4.268032
RON 5.093855
RSD 117.413837
RUB 91.485859
RWF 1707.798792
SAR 4.395408
SBD 9.521958
SCR 16.312531
SDG 705.038141
SEK 10.700602
SGD 1.50549
SHP 0.879404
SLE 28.306999
SLL 24579.056628
SOS 669.876373
SRD 44.905646
STD 24260.800928
STN 25.083661
SVC 10.251371
SYP 12963.300371
SZL 19.257932
THB 36.37137
TJS 10.936347
TMT 4.114189
TND 3.422349
TOP 2.822216
TRY 50.726194
TTD 7.93875
TWD 37.140229
TZS 2959.63802
UAH 50.707847
UGX 4053.42498
USD 1.172134
UYU 45.026962
UZS 14030.440731
VES 400.067165
VND 30786.091462
VUV 142.009123
WST 3.274103
XAF 654.869601
XAG 0.012416
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.16775
XCG 2.111385
XDR 0.821204
XOF 660.495323
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.524574
ZAR 19.243095
ZMK 10550.611212
ZMW 23.459845
ZWL 377.426571
  • RBGPF

    -1.5400

    82.5

    -1.87%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    85.68

    +0.64%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.46

    -0.09%

  • BTI

    -1.9000

    56.32

    -3.37%

  • AZN

    -4.4870

    89.94

    -4.99%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    47.65

    -1.2%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    24.02

    +0.42%

  • NGG

    -0.8900

    80

    -1.11%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    24.39

    +1.03%

  • RELX

    -1.3400

    40.29

    -3.33%

  • BCC

    -1.6900

    83.82

    -2.02%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    35.15

    -0.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.67

    -0.22%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.5

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    17.1

    +0.29%

AI content proliferates in Hungary ahead of next year's elections
AI content proliferates in Hungary ahead of next year's elections / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - AFP

AI content proliferates in Hungary ahead of next year's elections

A video of Hungarian soldiers going off to fight in Ukraine and returning home in caskets is just one of many AI-generated posts that have appeared on Prime Minister Viktor Orban's social media accounts ahead of elections next year.

Text size:

Orban, a nationalist who has been in power since 2010 in the central European country, is expected to face an unprecedented challenge from opposition leader Peter Magyar.

Ahead of the contest, politicians and their supporters across the political spectrum have used the technology, with Orban targeting the opposition, following in the footsteps of US President Donald Trump.

Trump has repeatedly posted fabricated videos, stirring online outrage.

Experts warn that because some AI content can generate very emotional reactions, the use of the technology could sway public opinion ahead of the poll.

- Clips targeting opposition -

Orban's backers have invested significant resources into AI ahead of the poll, expected in April.

One group, the National Resistance Movement (NEM) which backs Orban's Fidesz party, has in recent months targeted Magyar in mostly unlabelled AI-generated videos on social media.

Since June 15, the group spent over 1.5 million euros ($1.7 million) on Facebook and YouTube to promote its content, more than any political organisation in the EU, based on public data from platform owners Meta and Google.

The two US tech giants recently ended political advertising in the EU because of new rules that came into force last week that require such ads to be clearly labelled -- including who sponsored them -- and restricting the deployment of personally targeted ads.

Some of NEM's videos contain non-existent people manipulated to express outrage at Magyar's alleged policy plans, while a few others are deepfake videos of him.

Other pro-Orban AI clips support the nationalist leader's policy drives, such as his opposition to Ukraine's EU membership bid, which he has warned could drag Hungary into the war in the neighbouring country.

The clip of AI-generated Hungarian soldiers in caskets was advertised on Facebook and broadcast on state TV in June, in the final days of a mail-in ballot on Kyiv's EU accession bid.

The government insists that using such content is acceptable as long as it is properly labelled as artificially generated.

But AFP found multiple instances of Orban and his allies posting realistically appearing videos and pictures that seem to have been created with AI without clearly labelling them as such.

Orban's opponent, Magyar, has also used AI on his social media channels in the past without labelling it, such as a fake photo of himself in combat uniform in a tongue-in-cheek post arguing why he does not ally with the rest of the opposition.

If the use of AI "is clearly visible and obvious to everyone, then it is not a problem," Magyar told AFP, adding that anything else could be considered "election fraud".

He has condemned Orban's AI videos as "pathetic".

The government's AI commissioner Laszlo Palkovics said "it would be advisable to avoid trying to influence voters with AI content".

"But it is up to everyone to decide" how they want to use AI, Palkovics told AFP. He insisted the government "fully supports" the landmark EU AI Act, which was passed last year.

Hungary has said that it wants to develop its own AI ethics code, with Orban striving to make the eastern European country a "key regional player" in the AI race.

His economy minister, Marton Nagy, at a two-day AI conference last month admitted that so far local companies are lagging behind most of their EU peers in AI adoption.

- 'Highly toxic' -

Experts are concerned about the proliferation of AI-generated content.

"A (deep) fake video can have a heightened impact," communication researcher Petra Aczel told AFP, adding that she expected "extremely strong sensory influences in the upcoming political campaigns around the world".

"Even if it is branded as AI-generated and contains visible glitches, some people will believe it, because they have an emotional reaction to it," she added.

The EU AI Act will not restrain political actors, Hungarian-American AI consultant George Tilesch told AFP.

"The algorithms governing social media are feeding us the same type of content, because that creates the highest level of engagement" said the Silicon Valley-based expert, who has advised the US, EU and major corporations on artificial intelligence.

Coupled with the rapid breakthroughs in generative AI, this "creates a potentially highly toxic concoction," he said.

A.Novak--TPP