YouTubers face penalties if they use generative AI — unless they comply with this new rule

New label requirements to tamp down on deepfakes.
 By 
Cecily Mauran
 on 
YouTube logo on a smartphone with a chip that says "AI" in the background
YouTube wants to make AI-generated content more transparent. Credit: Getty Images

YouTube will soon require creators to disclose whether a video was made with generative AI.

On Tuesday, the video streaming giant announced this, and other updates, to mitigate the misleading or harmful effects of generative AI.

"When creators upload content, we will have new options for them to select to indicate that it contains realistic altered or synthetic material," said Jennifer Flannery O'Connor and Emily Moxley, YouTube product management VPs.


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YouTube description panel on a smartphone showing the disclosure label that the video is AI-generated
What YouTube labels indicating AI-generated content will look like. Credit: YouTube

Creators who fail to consistently do this might face penalties, such as content removal or suspension from the YouTube Partner Program. The announcement also said artists and creators will be able to request the removal of content (including music) that uses their likeness without consent.

The widespread availability of generative AI has heightened the threat of deepfakes and misinformation, especially with the upcoming presidential election. Both the public and private sector have acknowledged a need to detect and prevent the nefarious use of generative AI.

For example, President Biden's AI executive order specifically addressed the need for labeling or watermarking AI-generated content. OpenAI is working on its own tool, a "provenance classifier," that detects whether an image was made with its DALL-E 3 AI generator. Just last week, Meta announced a new policy that requires political advertisers to disclose whether an ad uses generative AI.

On YouTube, when a creator uploads a video, they'll be given the option of indicating whether it "contains realistic altered or synthetic material," the blog post said. "For example, this could be an AI-generated video that realistically depicts an event that never happened, or content showing someone saying or doing something they didn't actually do."

Labels informing viewers that a video has AI-generated or altered content will be added to the description panel. A "more prominent label" will be added to content involving sensitive topics. Even if AI-generated content is appropriately labeled, if it violates YouTube's community guidelines, it will be taken down.

How will all of this content moderation be enforced? By AI of course. In addition to creating fake content that looks convincingly real, generative AI can also successfully identify and catch content that violates content policies. YouTube will be deploying generative AI technology to help contextualize and understand threats at scale.

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Cecily Mauran
Tech Reporter

Cecily is a tech reporter at Mashable who covers AI, Apple, and emerging tech trends. Before getting her master's degree at Columbia Journalism School, she spent several years working with startups and social impact businesses for Unreasonable Group and B Lab. Before that, she co-founded a startup consulting business for emerging entrepreneurial hubs in South America, Europe, and Asia. You can find her on X at @cecily_mauran.

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