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Irish MEP 'hasn't a clue' about Swedish House Mafia as lyrics used in AI letter

Irish MEP 'hasn't a clue' about Swedish House Mafia as lyrics used in AI letter

Irish MEP Ciaran Mullooly said he would use AI again after he admitted to using it in an open letter to Ursula Von der Leyen.
Last month, the Independent Ireland politician said he used AI to draft a letter urging the EU to deliver more aid to Gaza. The letter bizarrely contained lyrics from Don't You Worry Child, a song by electronic music group Swedish House Mafia.
Asked by the Irish Mirror in Brussels if he was a fan of the house group, he laughed and said: 'I haven't a clue who they are, my son has given me a hard time over it.'
However, the MEP insists that the portion of the letter which contains the lyrics 'Don't you worry, don't you worry child, see heaven's got a plan for you', wasn't written by AI. He says these lyrics were written in an email to him about the conflict in Gaza.
Mr Mullooly continued: 'The first part of the letter we used AI, we put our hands up. The second part of the letter, you can search all you want, you won't find the monologue that Donal from my office wrote, he wrote it after reading 1,000 emails.
'I asked him to read 1,000 emails and then he wrote it and he thought it summed up the vulnerability of children. He is a musician and he spotted a line in one of the emails and he wrote about that and I thought he did it in a very powerful way. I make no apologies, it got the attention of the people.'
Mr Mullooly, who was formerly a journalist in RTÉ, said he will continue to use AI in his work as an MEP. The letter, which was sent to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, tells the fictional story of a young girl called Gazi, who lives in Rafah.
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However, it does not say that the story isn't true, and Mr Mullooly appeals to the President to help the girl who has been displaced. In the letter, the MEP pleads to Von der Leyen: "Will you tell her, 'Don't you worry, don't you worry child, see heaven's got a plan for you?'
"Will you assure her that Europe remembers its promise, that we will not let another generation of children perish when we have the means to act?"
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