Google to require disclosures for digitally altered content in election ads
The Hindu
Google said it plans to make it compulsory for advertisers to disclose election ads that use digitally altered content to depict realistic-looking people or events to combat election misinformation.
Google said on Monday it would make it mandatory for advertisers to disclose election ads that use digitally altered content to depict real or realistic-looking people or events, its latest step to battle election misinformation.
The update to the disclosure requirements under the political content policy requires marketers to select a checkbox in the "altered or synthetic content" section of their campaign settings.
The rapid growth of generative AI, which can create text, images and video in seconds in response to prompts, has raised concerns about its potential misuse.
The rise of deepfakes, convincingly manipulated content to misrepresent someone, have further blurred the lines between the real and the fake.
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Google said it will generate an in-ad disclosure for feeds and shorts on mobile phones and in-streams on computers and television. For other formats, advertisers will be required to provide a noticeable "prominent disclosure" for users.
The "acceptable disclosure language" will vary according to the context of the ad, Google said.