China proposes new regulation on labeling AI-generated content
A staff member introduces the use of AIGC technology in ancient book restoration to a visitor during the 2024 World AI Conference in Shanghai, East China, July 6, 2024. BEIJING -- The Cyberspace Administration of China has released a draft regulation that aims to standardize the labeling of AI-generated synthetic content to protect national security and public interests. Titled "Measures for identifying AI-generated synthetic content," the draft regulation is open for public feedback until Oct 14, 2024. AI-generated synthetic content, as defined by the proposed rules, is any text, image, audio or video created using artificial intelligence technologies. Platforms that distribute content are also required to regulate the spread of AI-generated materials by offering identification functions and reminding users to disclose whether their posts contain AI-generated content.





Discover Related

Sex-Fantasy Chatbots Are Leaking a Constant Stream of Explicit Messages

Digital child abuse, the danger of AI-based exploitation

Think Before You Ghibli: Privacy Concerns Over AI-Generated Portraits

Artificial intelligence advances green solutions

Beijing AI academy slams inclusion on US Entity List

Agentic AI: The next frontier in artificial intelligence

OpenAI’s Sora Is Plagued by Sexist, Racist, and Ableist Biases

Trump's call for AI deregulation gets strong backing from Big Tech

New IP rules set to advance opening-up

X sues government for using IT Act to block content, says arbitrary censorship

Hollywood urges Trump to protect film, TV from AI

No copyright in news that is freely available, OpenAI tells Delhi HC

China's DeepSeek AI Banned By US Commerce On Govt Devices: Here's Why

'Zalim Hindu' Porn: How AI is Mass Producing Pornographic Images of Muslim Women

SC allows Ranveer Allahbadia to resume show, asks govt to curb ‘vulgar content’

India’s AI investment, the budgetary push, the need for regulations

UK newspapers launch campaign against AI copyright plans

UK creative industries launch campaign against AI tech firms’ content use
