Arizona 2024 2024 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1359 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/21/2024

                      	SB 1359 
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ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-sixth Legislature 
Second Regular Session 
Senate: ELEC DP 7-1-0-0 | 3
rd
 Read: 24-4-2-0 
House: MOE DPA 8-0-0-1 
 
SB 1359: election communications; deep fakes; prohibition 
Sponsor: Senator Carroll, LD 28 
Caucus & COW 
Overview 
Establishes a period of 90 days before an election during which a person who creates or 
distributes a deceptive and fraudulent deepfake of a candidate or political party on the ballot, 
without a clear and conspicuous disclosure, commits a class 1 misdemeanor.  
History 
Interactive computer service refers to any information service, system, or access software 
provider that provides or enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server, 
including specifically a service or system that provides access to the internet and such 
systems operated or services offered by libraries or educational institutions (47 U.S.C. § 230). 
Provisions 
1. Prohibits, within 90 days of an election, a person from creating, sponsoring or distributing 
a synthetic media message the person knows is a deceptive and fraudulent deepfake of a 
candidate or political party appearing on the ballot. (Sec. 1) 
2. Exempts a person from the prohibition outlined above if the synthetic media message 
includes a clear and conspicuous disclosure specifying that the media includes content 
generated by artificial intelligence. (Sec. 1) 
3. Requires, for media consisting of audio only where no visual disclosure is possible, the 
disclosure to be read in a clearly spoken manner in a pitch that can be easily heard by the 
average listener at the beginning and the end of the audio. (Sec. 1) 
4. Specifies, if the audio is longer than two minutes in length, the disclosure outlined above 
must be interspersed within the audio at intervals of not more than two minutes each. 
(Sec. 1) 
5. Allows a candidate whose appearance, action or speech is depicted in a deceptive and 
fraudulent deepfake in violation of this act, to seek injunctive or other equitable relief 
from the sponsor or the creator of the media that prohibits the publication of the deepfake. 
(Sec. 1) 
6. Exempts radio or television broadcasting stations, including cable or satellite television 
operators, programmers or producers in the following circumstances:  
a) the broadcast of a deceptive and fraudulent deepfake as part of a bona fide newscast, 
if an acknowledgement is made that there are questions surrounding the authenticity 
of the media; or 
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note    	SB 1359 
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b) when paid to broadcast a deceptive and fraudulent deepfake, the broadcasting 
organization makes a good faith effort to establish that the depiction is not a deceptive 
and fraudulent deepfake. (Sec. 1) 
7. Exempts internet websites and regularly published periodicals of general circulation, 
including internet or electronic publications, that routinely carry news and commentary 
if the publication clearly states that the materially deceptive audio or visual media was 
generated by artificial intelligence. (Sec. 1) 
8. Exempts media that constitutes satire or parody and an interactive computer service as 
defined by federal law. (Sec. 1) 
9. Classifies a violation of this law as a class 1 misdemeanor. (Sec. 1) 
10. Specifies a person who commits a violation of this law within five years of being convicted 
for this same offense is guilty of a class 4 felony. (Sec. 1) 
11. Classifies the violation of this law with the intent to cause violence or bodily harm as a 
class 6 felony. (Sec. 1) 
12. Defines creator, deceptive and fraudulent deepfake and synthetic media. (Sec. 1) 
13. Contains a severability clause. (Sec. 2) 
Amendments 
Committee on Municipal Oversight & Elections 
1. Removes the applicability of this act to a political party on the ballot.  
2. Clarifies that the clear and conspicuous disclosure must convey to a reasonable person 
that the media includes content generated by artificial intelligence.  
3. Removes disclosure requirements for media consisting of audio only.  
4. Removes certain exemptions in specified circumstances applying to broadcast media, 
news organizations, periodicals and certain internet websites.  
5. Removes language constituting violations of this act as specified criminal offenses.   
6. Specifies a person who fails to make the disclosure as required by this act is liable for a 
civil penalty for each day, they distribute the deceptive and fraudulent deepfake without 
such disclosure.  
7. Alters the definition of a deceptive and fraudulent deepfake to specify that the synthetic 
media depicting a candidate must be intentionally calculated to mislead a reasonable 
person into concluding that a real individual said or did something that they did not say 
or do in reality.