概要
公開日: 2026-05-27
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原文
May 27, 2026 Global Affairs Election information and safeguards in 2026 Ahead of global elections, we’re helping people access information, supporting cyber defenders, and increasing AI transparency Loading… Share 2026 is the world’s second major election year since generative AI became widely available, and we’re continuing to build on the foundation we laid in 2024 to help protect elections in countries and territories around the world. Our focus is to build and responsibly deploy groundbreaking products in ways that: Surface reliable information about voting and results Support cyber infrastructure defenders Increase transparency around AI-generated content Combat misuse by bad actors Monitor bias in our models to keep ChatGPT’s responses politically neutral Surfacing reliable information People already use ChatGPT to ask practical questions in their preferred languages about civic events: how to register, where to vote, what deadlines apply, what’s happening with a developing news event, or where to find official election results. Building on our efforts in 2024, we are working with partners to direct people to reliable sources of information about voting. Beginning this fall in the United States and Brazil, OpenAI will provide live vote counts from The Associated Press (opens in a new window) as results roll in on election night. In the US, we will also partner with Democracy Works (opens in a new window) to display reliable information about voting and registration processes, including voting locations and other election logistics, when people ask about those topics. Globally, we will continue to refine the way web search surfaces helpful information with source links. Since 2024, we have continued to improve the quality of information people get when they ask ChatGPT about election topics and breaking news. ChatGPT can search the web to provide stronger answers with source links so people can go deeper. Supporting cyber infrastructure defenders This is an important moment for cyber defenders across industries, and we believe AI plays a critical role in hardening digital infrastructure — including systems that support elections. OpenAI is committed to building resilience across the infrastructure stack, including in ways that support election execution. We recently announced Daybreak , our effort to change the way software is built and defended. Daybreak includes a number of programs intended to make software safer and more resilient, including Codex Security, which automatically identifies, validates, and helps remediate vulnerabilities in developers code. For more advanced defense, our Trusted Access for Cyber (TAC) program provides verified individuals access to frontier models for cyber defense. We have offered Codex Security as well as TAC access to registered voting system manufacturers (opens in a new window) in the US, and we are engaging the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) and the National Association of State Election Directors (NASED) to ensure state election authorities are briefed on the latest cyber capabilities and our tools for defenders. Increasing transparency People are increasingly using AI tools to create content they then share on social media, messaging apps, and the web. To help combat misleading “deepfakes”, we are investing in a multi-layered provenance approach that will equip people to verify whether content they’re seeing has been created or modified with AI. Last week, we announced a partnership to bring SynthID digital watermarks to images generated through ChatGPT , Codex, or the OpenAI API. This builds on our ongoing commitment to using the C2PA (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) standard, which uses metadata and cryptographic signatures to help information about an image securely travel with the content itself. These two approaches are complementary: SynthID embeds an invisible watermarking layer that can hold up through screenshots and