cd /news/artificial-intelligence/us-scrambles-to-stop-internet-users-… · home topics artificial-intelligence article
[ARTICLE · art-9888] src=arstechnica.com ↗ pub= topic=artificial-intelligence verified=true sentiment=↓ negative

US scrambles to stop Internet users re-creating dead pilots’ voices

Internet sleuths used AI and software to recreate the voices of pilots from the final moments of a fatal cargo plane crash, using sound spectrum imagery from public NTSB investigation files. In response, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) temporarily suspended public access to its online accident database to review how such reconstructions were possible, as federal law prohibits the agency from publicly releasing actual cockpit voice recordings.

read2 min views20 publishedMay 22, 2026

Pilots’ voices from the last seconds of a fatal cargo plane crash have been re-created by Internet sleuths using software and AI tools. The spread of reconstructed audio recordings has prompted a US government agency to suspend all public access to its database of civil transportation accidents—because federal law prohibits investigators from publicly releasing audio from cockpit voice recorders. The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) usually shares factual reports and evidence gathered from investigations of aircraft crashes and other civil transportation incidents. But on May 21, the NTSB announced that the online docket system containing such information was “temporarily unavailable” as it reviewed the publicly available materials that had enabled people to re-create cockpit audio recordings from aircraft disasters. “The NTSB is aware that advances in image recognition and computational methods have enabled individuals to reconstruct approximations of cockpit voice recorder audio from sound spectrum imagery released as part of NTSB investigations, including the ongoing investigation of the crash last year of UPS flight 2976 in Louisville, Kentucky,” according to an NTSB statement. “The NTSB does not release cockpit audio recordings.” UPS flight 2976 was a United Parcel Service MD-11F cargo aircraft that crashed shortly after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, on November 4, 2025, following a structural failure that led to an engine physically detaching as the aircraft left the ground. The three pilots aboard the aircraft, including a relief pilot, were killed. Another 12 people on the ground were killed, with 23 people being injured. The US Congress enacted a federal law in 1990 prohibiting the NTSB from publicly sharing any part of a cockpit voice or video recorder to protect the privacy of air crews. That law followed airline pilots’ pushback over the controversial TV station airing of a cockpit conversation relating to the August 1988 crash of Delta Air Lines Flight 1141 at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

── more in #artificial-intelligence 4 stories · sorted by recency
── more on @national transportation safety board 3 stories trending now
sponsored brought to you by zahid.host 4,200+ EU-deployed projects
reading about agents? ship yours in a single git push.

Run your AI side-project on zahid.host

EU-based hosting, git-push deploys, automatic HTTPS, no cold starts. Free tier with a custom domain — perfect for shipping the agent you just read about.

$git push zahid main
Live at https://your-agent.zahid.host
Get free account → Pricing
from €0/mo · no card required
LIVE [news/us-scrambles-to-stop…] indexed:0 read:2min 2026-05-22 ·