Google To Make It Easier for Advertisers To Disclose Digitally Altered Content in Election Ads

Google has said it will simplify how advertisers disclose election ads using digitally altered content to depict actual or realistic-looking people or events. Learn about the importance of this announcement.

July 3, 2024

  • Google has said it will simplify how advertisers disclose election ads using digitally altered content to depict actual or realistic-looking people or events.
  • The announcement comes as the US presidential race is heating up and GenAI’s rapid growth raises concerns about its possible misuse.

Google has announced that it will simplify how advertisers disclose election ads that use digitally altered content to represent actual or realistic-looking events or people. This is the search engine major’s latest step in combating election misinformation.

The update to the disclosure requirements under Google’s political content policy requires that marketers select a checkbox in the “altered or synthetic content” section of their campaign settings.

The company said it will create an in-ad disclosure for Shorts and feeds on cell phones and in-streams on computers and television. For any other format, advertisers need to write their own noticeable disclosures for users. Further, the “acceptable disclosure language” will depend on the ad’s context.

See more: US Justice Department Sues Adobe for Deceiving Consumers by Hiding Early Termination Fee

Google’s move comes as the 2024 US presidential race is heating up. Simultaneously, the rapid growth of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI), which can quickly create images, text, and videos, has raised concerns about its possible misuse. Moreover, the rise of deepfakes is blurring the lines between the fake and the real.

Earlier in May, Sam Altman-led OpenAI claimed it had disrupted five covert influence operations that intended to use AI models to “attempt and manipulate public opinion or influence political outcomes.”

Besides Google, other companies have taken actions to mitigate the risk of AI interfering in the upcoming US elections. For example, Meta platforms said last year that it would make it mandatory for advertisers to disclose whether AI or other digital tools were being used to create or alter social, political, or election-related ads on Facebook and Instagram. Microsoft has taken similar initiatives, including features that allow the watermarking of digital ads that prevent alteration without leaving evidence of tampering. Further, leading tech companies like Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Amazon have entered an agreement to reduce the risk of AI interfering in the 2024 US elections.

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Karthik Kashyap
Karthik comes from a diverse educational and work background. With an engineering degree and a Masters in Supply Chain and Operations Management from Nottingham University, United Kingdom, he has experience of close to 15 years having worked across different industries out of which, he has worked as a content marketing professional for a significant part of his career. Currently, as an assistant editor at Spiceworks Ziff Davis, he covers a broad range of topics across HR Tech and Martech, from talent acquisition to workforce management and from marketing strategy to innovation. Besides being a content professional, Karthik is an avid blogger, traveler, history buff, and fitness enthusiast. To share quotes or inputs for news pieces, please get in touch on karthik.kashyap@swzd.com
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