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Since September 1, China has made it mandatory to label all content created with AI - from text and images to audio and video. Now, any social network is required to put visible labels like “AI-generated,” as well as hidden ones - in the form of watermarks or metadata.
Platforms like WeChat, Douyin, Weibo, and RedNote have already implemented new rules: authors are forced to indicate the use of AI, and attempts to remove the label can result in the account being blocked. Weibo even allows users to complain about posts that do not indicate that they were made by a neural network.
60 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 3 Sep
Don't know what the point of doing this is. Pretty soon you won't be able to tell the difference (besides images and video).
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @Oxy 3 Sep
It's interesting to see a major country like China be one of the first to implement such a strict, nationwide policy. I wonder if other countries will follow suit and what the global impact on AI content will be.
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This can really help us to save the world for our orginal content creators.
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