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Synthetic participation

Synthetic participation is the idea that citizens’ input could be artificially generated — a model of the populace standing in for the people themselves. Instead of consulting real residents (which is messy and expensive), an institution could just “ask” an AI trained to imitate them. It’s worth naming clearly, because it’s a tempting shortcut and a dangerous one.

Faking public input isn’t new — long before ChatGPT, “astroturf” campaigns flooded official channels with manufactured comments (the US FCC’s net-neutrality comment period is a notorious case). AI makes convincing fakes vastly easier. If policymakers start treating a model of the electorate as a substitute for the electorate, it can erode the legitimacy of the very channels meant to give people a say. Opinion polling is a mild, analog version of this; AI could accelerate it into something corrosive.

There’s a meaningful distinction. A person-owned, person-controlled digital twin — one you tune to argue for your views, that you send into the world and remain responsible for — is a different proposition from an institution modelling a whole constituency without anyone’s consent. The first keeps a human accountable for what they “hit submit” on; the second replaces people with a guess about them.

  • Matt Stempeck, with audience discussion (including the person-owned-twin counterpoint), “Civic AI” — Metagov seminar, 2025: youtube.com/watch?v=SonfdR0_h2w