Will this apply to advertisers, too? They don’t block outright scams, so probably not. Money absolves all sins.
Your YouTube is not working optimally if you’re seeing ads there
My point was that ads are a big part of the typical user’s experience, and it is hypocritical to believe AI needs to be disclosed but not apply that to paid content.
What? Didnt you know the government is giving away 6400.00 to everybody if you but only claim it by filling out this form on my sketchy website with all your personal info…?
tbf, a lot of ads are already misleading as it is, so pointing out AI isnt going to change its perception much.
That’s a win, but it would need to be enforced… Which is harder to do
Harder, but in this with mutliple generations of people being trained to question every link and image on screen? Not necessarily impossible.
People will report this for sure if they feel confident.
There will definitely be false flags though
this only gonna train i.a to not look like i.a
… They’d progress that way regardless so…
I’m waiting for the constant big drama when it turns out Big Popular Youtuber of the Week gets accused of using/not using Ai and it turns out the oppsite is true.
None of this is AI-specific. Youtube wants you to label your videos if you use “altered or synthetic content” that could mislead people about real people or events. 99% of what Corridor Crew puts out would probably need to be labeled, for example, and they mostly use traditional digital effects.
It’s a good first step. If claiming your AI video is real gets more views then I’m curious if the risks outweigh the cost of being caught.
You can only really pull that with older people and children. Most of us millennials can spot the patterns AI gen produces, but I’ve seen my dad just consume the content and be largely unaware of the fact that it was artificially generated. He constantly complains those videos say nothing but watches tons of them anyways, mostly related to non-news about sports.