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Wednesday · June 17, 2026 · Issue No. 899
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Keller: AI-generated Marco Rubio shows dangers of artificial intelligence

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AI fakes Marco Rubio, raises serious concerns

In an eye-opening demonstration of artificial intelligence's evolving capabilities, a team recently created a convincing fake video of Senator Marco Rubio that has sent ripples through political and technology circles. The AI-generated clip, showcased in CNN's recent coverage, represents what experts are calling a watershed moment in the development of synthetic media—one that demands our immediate attention as business leaders navigating an increasingly digital landscape.

Key developments worth noting:

  • A team at NewsCorp created an entirely fabricated video of Senator Marco Rubio speaking fluently in Spanish and making policy statements he never actually made, demonstrating how AI can now create highly convincing "deepfakes" that are nearly impossible to distinguish from authentic content.

  • The fake Rubio video was created with readily available technology, not specialized or highly advanced tools, suggesting these capabilities are now accessible to virtually anyone with basic technical skills.

  • The coming election cycle faces unprecedented risks from AI-generated misinformation, with current detection methods lagging behind the technology's rapid advancement.

  • News organizations and tech platforms are scrambling to develop verification systems, but there's no perfect solution on the immediate horizon.

The most alarming insight from this demonstration isn't just that AI can create convincing fakes—it's how quickly this technology has democratized. What once required sophisticated technical expertise and substantial computing resources now exists as accessible tools anyone can use. Bill Keller, former executive editor of The New York Times, pointedly observed that the technology used to create the Rubio fake wasn't cutting-edge or specialized—it was "off-the-shelf" technology available to virtually anyone.

This accessibility represents a fundamental shift in the misinformation landscape. Previously, creating convincing fake content required specialized skills, substantial resources, or both—natural barriers that limited the scale of the problem. Those barriers have effectively disappeared. The democratization of deepfake technology means businesses must now operate in an environment where trust in digital communications can no longer be taken for granted.

For businesses, the implications extend far beyond politics. Consider how your organization might be affected if convincing deepfakes of your CEO announcing false acquisitions, product failures, or controversial policies began circulating online. The market impacts could be immediate and devastating before any correction could be issued. A financial services firm in the UK recently experience

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