Topic: AI and Deepfakes Policy
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AI and Deepfakes Policy

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YouTube Pilots Deepfake Likeness Tool for U.S. Officials, Candidates and Journalists
YouTube is expanding its AI‑driven likeness detection tool beyond entertainment creators to a pilot group of government officials, political candidates and journalists, with plans to open it to any user in those categories. Announced in a March 10 Axios interview with executives, the system scans uploaded videos for facial impersonations and allows verified participants—who must submit a government ID and video selfie—to review flagged clips and request takedowns through YouTube’s privacy complaint process, though parody and satire remain allowed. The move is framed by YouTube’s government‑affairs chief Leslie Miller as aimed at protecting the "integrity of the public conversation" at a time when generative AI has made it easier to fabricate convincing videos of public figures, including President Trump. CEO Neal Mohan has made AI transparency and synthetic‑media protections one of his top 2026 priorities, and YouTube is also backing the proposed federal NO FAKES Act while pointing to Trump’s earlier TAKE IT DOWN Act on non‑consensual intimate images as a narrower precedent. Company officials say creators using the tool so far have requested relatively few removals and often view impersonations as benign or even helpful to their business, but YouTube is now exploring voice‑impersonation detection and possible monetization models for likeness‑based content, underscoring how platform rules are racing to catch up with politically sensitive deepfake risks.
AI and Deepfakes Policy Social Media Platforms and Elections