geteilt von: https://programming.dev/post/27078650

China has released a set of guidelines on labeling internet content that is generated or composed by artificial intelligence (AI) technology, which are set to take effect on Sept. 1.

  • zlatiah@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    18 hours ago

    In response, the guidelines regulate the labeling of AI-generated online content throughout its production and dissemination processes, requiring providers to add visible marks to their content in appropriate locations.

    My understanding is that this is meant more as a set of legal guidelines… I’m not a legal scholar, but since China has a history of enforcing certain information-related laws I’d assume they can “legally” enforce it

    On the technical side… there is a subfield of LLM research that focuses on “watermarking” or ensuring that LLM-generated outputs can be clearly identified, so I guess in theory it might be enforceable

    In practice as to whether it will actually be ensured… who knows (facepalm

    • spaffel@spaffel.socialOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      9 hours ago

      On the technical side… there is a subfield of LLM research that focuses on “watermarking” or ensuring that LLM-generated outputs can be clearly identified, so I guess in theory it might be enforceable

      Thanks! Didnt know about this