At Milken, Leaders Decry AI-Driven Antisemitism and Urge Platform Action
Speakers framed AI-driven antisemitism as a cross-cutting threat to platforms as well as community safety.
Overview
- Panelists at the Milken Institute Global Conference said social media bots, generative AI and recommendation feeds are manufacturing and amplifying antisemitic content, especially for younger users, and urged companies to enforce their own rules or face business risk.
- American Jewish Committee CEO Ted Deutch pressed platforms to apply the protections they already claim to offer users, warning that unchecked recommendation systems can turn services into what he called algorithmic hate machines.
- Executives and investors at the gathering also warned that a growing populist mood is fusing with extremism, with TD Bank vice chair Jeffrey Solomon calling that mix a dangerous trend for Jews and for the broader public.
- Philanthropy leaders moved to bolster communal life, with the Leon and Toby Cooperman Family Foundation giving $10 million to Birthright Israel and Sheryl Sandberg endowing a Dave Goldberg Scholarship that will cover Camp Ramah tuition for 30 need-based campers in perpetuity.
- Conference speakers cited stark data that most Jewish Americans see antisemitism rising and that security costs are surging, while the White House rolled out a counterterrorism strategy targeting threats tied to Iran and other actors, linking community concerns to policy responses.