US regulates AI-generated voice calls

Modern artificial intelligence has surpassed ChatGPT by producing more than mere text. Nowadays, you can replicate your voice or another person’s to pronounce specific words with numerous free AI tools.

The US government knows this trend could become a windfall for online criminals, so it recently announced a new law against it. 

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released a declaratory ruling that AI-generated voice calls fall under the consent limitations imposed on “artificial or prerecorded voices under the TCPA. In other words, people and companies using AI voice calls must follow specific rules. 

What are the rules on AI-generated voice calls?

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The United States hasn’t explicitly banned all AI-generated calls. Instead, those using them must follow the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, according to the Declaratory Ruling released on February 8, 2024.

The latter is “In the Matter of Implications of Artificial Intelligence Technologies on Protecting Consumers from Unwanted Robocalls and Robotexts.” 

This Ruling states that AI-generated voice calls must follow the rules on “artificial or prerecorded voices.” That means someone sending an AI voice message must get consent by:

AI-generated voice calls must also offer specific information and options, such as: 

Let’s say someone calls you via AI. That person or group must introduce their business and share their phone number. Then, they must ask if you are willing to speak with an AI-generated voice.

The caller must also let you refuse by saying “no” or pressing a number on your phone. The AI-generated voice call may only start once you give your permission.

The Verge says state attorneys may already pursue people who use AI robocalls based on their scams. However, the ruling allows them to hold scam artists accountable only for using an AI-generated voice. 

What are the modern voice AI programs available?

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Murf is one of the most popular AI voice generators nowadays. A previous Inquirer Tech article reports it can deliver the following:

Larger tech firms like Microsoft made AI programs that can replicate your voice called VALL-E. Another Inq Tech post reported it could “preserve the speaker’s emotion and acoustic environment of the acoustic in synthesis.” 

These technologies have positive applications, such as facilitating voiceovers for online lessons and videos. However, they could help malicious people scam folks.

For example, a caller could impersonate someone’s grandmother to have money wired for an emergency.

An unsuspecting victim may send funds immediately to save their loved one. 

These cases would likely expand to other countries as AI blends with every facet of daily life. Learn more about the latest digital trends at Inquirer Tech.

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