Government proposes always-on labels for AI-generated content

India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology proposed persistent labels for AI-generated content on social media in a notice issued on April 21. The move amends IT Rules to enhance oversight on user-generated news. Feedback is invited until May 7.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) proposed an amendment to Rule 3(3)(a)(ii) of the IT Rules 2021 in a notice issued on Tuesday. It requires a "continuous and clearly visible display of label for synthetically generated information [AI generated content] throughout the duration of the content in visual display."

The rule was notified in February 2026 as part of obligations for social media intermediaries on synthetically generated content (SGI). A MeitY official said the change ensures labels do not disappear after the initial seconds of a video or visual. February rules also set a three-hour deadline for platforms to remove AI-generated or deepfake content if flagged by the government or court-ordered.

An October 2025 draft had mandated labels covering at least 10% of the visual display, but industry pushback led to its removal in the final February rules. The same notice extended the comment deadline on March 30 draft amendments to May 7 for a second time, bringing user-generated news under publisher-like oversight.

These drafts make compliance with MeitY advisories mandatory, require 180-day data retention, and expand the Inter-Departmental Committee's role to any "matter." The Press Club of India has called for a complete rollback of the draft rules.

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India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has released a draft amendment to the IT Rules 2021, bringing news content posted by individual users under the same framework as publishers. Social media platforms must comply with ministry guidelines or face legal action. Comments are invited until April 14.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has doubled its online content blocking orders to 24,300 in 2025, officials said, citing a surge in deepfakes and AI-generated content. Roughly 60% of these orders targeted URLs on X, formerly Twitter, with 25% for Facebook and Instagram, and 5% for YouTube.

South Africa's Communications Minister Solly Malatsi has withdrawn the draft National Artificial Intelligence Policy following revelations of fictitious sources in its references, likely generated by AI tools. The errors impacted three of the policy's six pillars, leading to internal probes and commitments to accountability. Malatsi described the lapse as a key reason for needing stronger human oversight in AI use.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Wikipedia has prohibited the use of large language models to create or rewrite article content, citing violations of core content policies. Basic edits like fixing typos and certain article translations are permitted under strict conditions. The policy's enforcement details remain unclear.

 

 

 

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