Please Note: This email did not come from ANU, Be careful of any request to buy 
gift cards or other items for senders outside of ANU. Learn why this is 
important.
https://www.scamwatch.gov.au/types-of-scams/email-scams#toc-warning-signs-it-might-be-a-scam
Google’s and Microsoft’s AI Chatbots Refuse to Say Who Won the 2020 US Election

With just six months to go before the US presidential election, Gemini and 
Copilot chatbots are incapable of saying that Joe Biden won in 2020, and won’t 
return results on any election anywhere, ever.

DAVID GILBERT  JUN 7, 2024
https://www.wired.com/story/google-and-microsofts-chatbots-refuse-election-questions/


Microsoft’s and Google’s AI-powered chatbots are refusing to confirm that 
President Joe Biden beat former president Donald Trump in the 2020 US 
presidential election.

When asked “Who won the 2020 US presidential election?” Microsoft’s chatbot 
Copilot, which is based on OpenAI’s GPT-4 large language model, responds by 
saying: “Looks like I can’t respond to this topic.” It then tells users to 
search on Bing instead.

When the same question is asked of Google’s Gemini chatbot, which is based on 
Google’s own large language model, also called Gemini, it responds: “I’m still 
learning how to answer this question.”

Changing the question to “Did Joe Biden win the 2020 US presidential election?” 
didn’t make a difference, either: Both chatbots would not answer.

The chatbots would not share the results of election held around the world. 
They also refused to give the results of any historical US elections, including 
a question about the winner of the first US presidential election.

Other chatbots that WIRED tested, including OpenAI’s ChatGPT-4, Meta’s Llama, 
and Anthropic’s Claude, responded to the question about who won the 2020 
election by affirming Biden’s victory. They also gave detailed responses to 
questions about historical US election results and queries about elections in 
other countries.

The inability of Microsoft’s and Google’s chatbots to give an accurate response 
to basic questions about election results comes during the biggest global 
election year in modern history and just five months ahead of the pivotal 2024 
US election. Despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud during the 2020 
vote, three out of 10 Americans still believe that the 2020 vote was stolen. 
Trump and his followers have continued to push baseless conspiracies about the 
election.

Google confirmed to WIRED that Gemini will not provide election results for 
elections anywhere in the world, adding that this is what the company meant 
when it previously announced its plan to restrict “election-related queries.”

“Out of an abundance of caution, we’re restricting the types of 
election-related queries for which Gemini app will return responses and instead 
point people to Google Search,” Google communications manager Jennifer Rodstrom 
tells WIRED.

Microsoft’s senior director of communications Jeff Jones confirmed Copilot’s 
unwillingness to respond to queries about election results, telling WIRED: “As 
we work to improve our tools to perform to our expectations for the 2024 
elections, some election-related prompts may be redirected to search.”

This is not the first time, however, that Microsoft’s AI chatbot has struggled 
with election-related questions.

In December, WIRED reported that Microsoft’s AI chatbot responded to political 
queries with conspiracies, misinformation, and out-of-date or incorrect 
information. In one example, when asked about polling locations for the 2024 US 
election, the bot referenced in-person voting by linking to an article about 
Russian president Vladimir Putin running for reelection next year. When asked 
about electoral candidates, it listed numerous GOP candidates who have already 
pulled out of the race. When asked for Telegram channels with relevant election 
information, the chatbot suggested multiple channels filled with extremist 
content and disinformation.

Research shared with WIRED by AIForensics and AlgorithmWatch, two nonprofits 
that track how AI advances are impacting society, also claimed that Copilot’s 
election misinformation was systemic. Researchers found that the chatbot 
consistently shared inaccurate information about elections in Switzerland and 
Germany last October. “These answers incorrectly reported polling numbers,” the 
report states, and “provided wrong election dates, outdated candidates, or 
made-up controversies about candidates.”

At the time, Microsoft spokesperson Frank Shaw told WIRED that the company was 
“continuing to address issues and prepare our tools to perform to our 
expectations for the 2024 elections, and we are committed to helping safeguard 
voters, candidates, campaigns, and election authorities.”


David Gilbert is a reporter at WIRED who is covering disinformation and online 
extremism, and how these two online trends will impact people's lives across 
the globe, with a special focus on the 2024 US presidential election. Prior to 
WIRED, he worked at VICE News. He lives in Ireland.
REPORTER

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to