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YouTube announced on Wednesday that it will begin automatically detecting and labeling AI-generated videos, moving beyond its previous reliance on creators to self-report their use of generative AI tools. The platform is also repositioning its AI disclosure labels to be more visible to viewers.
“Starting in May 2026, we’re rolling out new internal signals to help identify AI-generated content,” YouTube said in a blog post. “If a creator doesn’t specify whether or not they used AI, but our systems detect significant photorealistic AI use, we will now automatically apply a label.”ign
The move addresses a gap in YouTube’s existing policy, which since 2024 has required creators to manually disclose when they upload realistic content made with altered or synthetic media. Under the updated system, creators who believe their content was incorrectly flagged can update the disclosure status in YouTube Studio.blog
YouTube is also making AI labels harder to miss. For long-form videos, the disclosure will now appear directly below the video player, above the description. For YouTube Shorts, the label will display as an overlay on the video itself.yahoo
“By moving these labels on to the main stage, viewers get the context they need at a glance,” YouTube said. “This is now the single label format for all photorealistic and meaningfully AI altered or generated content on YouTube.”ign
Content that is clearly unrealistic, animated, or only slightly altered will continue to carry a disclosure only in the expanded description.ign
Disclosures will be permanent and cannot be removed in several cases: content created using YouTube’s own AI tools, such as Veo or Dream Screen, and content containing C2PA metadata indicating it was fully generated by AI. YouTube is a steering member of the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity, which developed the C2PA standard for tracking digital content provenance.c2pa
YouTube emphasized that the labels alone will not affect how a video is recommended or whether it remains eligible for monetization. The changes come as platforms face growing pressure from regulators โ including under the EU AI Act, which introduces transparency requirements for AI-generated content starting in August 2026.ign