YouTube is making AI-generated content labels more prominent by repositioning them below video players for long-form videos and as overlays on Shorts, while implementing automatic detection technology to identify photorealistic AI-created content. The changes, driven by user feedback and concerns that over 20 percent of videos shown to new users are low-quality AI-generated content, allow creators to dispute wrongly identified labels, though disclosures remain permanent for content using YouTube's own AI tools.
1 comment
YouTube is making AI-generated content labels more prominent by repositioning them below video players for long-form videos and as overlays on Shorts, while implementing automatic detection technology to identify photorealistic AI-created content. The changes, driven by user feedback and concerns that over 20 percent of videos shown to new users are low-quality AI-generated content, allow creators to dispute wrongly identified labels, though disclosures remain permanent for content using YouTube's own AI tools.