This year’s Google I/O marked the transition of Google from a search company to a fully AI-focused company. The company launched several AI tools, but the one that matters the most for YouTubers is Google Omni, built for video generation and editing.
While tools like Omni lower the barrier for creators, which is a good thing, it also results in the platform being inundated with low-effort AI content. The company understands that this will annoy a large percentage of its users, so it has been asking creators to disclose AI-generated content since 2024.
It’s been a good first step, but the label was buried in the video description, which is not exactly a prominent place. That changes today. YouTube is making two notable updates to how AI-generated content is labeled on the platform, and both of them are good news for viewers and creators alike.
For long-form videos, the AI disclosure label is moving from the description to a spot directly below the video player. Users no longer have to click to open the description to find out whether the video they are watching is generated using AI.
For Shorts, the label will appear as an overlay right on the video itself. If a video looks real but was created or heavily altered using AI, you will know before you even start watching.
For content that is animated, unrealistic, or only slightly touched up, the disclosure will still live in the expanded description. So the changes are specifically aimed at photorealistic or meaningfully altered content.
While YouTube doesn’t punish AI videos, there are creators who might not disclose this information or who genuinely forget to do it. YouTube has a solution for this, too. YouTube is rolling out automatic AI detection. If the platform’s systems detect significant photorealistic AI-use in a video and the creator hasn’t disclosed it, YouTube will apply the label automatically.
If the system labels a video incorrectly, creators can go into YouTube Studio and update the disclosure status. The only cases where the label sticks permanently are videos made using YouTube’s own AI tools, like Veo or Dream Screen, or videos with metadata confirming they are fully AI-generated.
As I mentioned before, these labels do not affect how videos are recommended or whether they can earn money. This is purely about giving viewers the right information at the right time.
macOS users already have several clipboard manager options, including Paste and Maccy. Most of them work well, but they are usually built around keyboard shortcuts. That is useful for keyboard-heavy users, but it can feel out of place for users who rely on the trackpad for most of their work.
Layr, a new clipboard manager from the developer behind Declutr, takes a different approach. Rather than assigning a keyboard shortcut to open the clipboard history, the app lets users bring up a clipboard overlay with a four-finger tap on the trackpad.
A new research consortium has found something worth paying attention to: when you ask AI about grief, love, loss, or moral decisions, it almost never brings religion into the conversation.
The Consortium for Evaluation of Faith and Ethics in AI (CEFE-AI), a collaboration among researchers at Brigham Young University, Baylor University, the University of Notre Dame, and Yeshiva University, published its findings this week at the Summit on AI Ethics in Athens, Greece.
Today, Apple seeded the first beta of iOS 26.6 to developers, and so far, it contains exactly one known feature. It’s an alert that tells you when you’ve run out of space on your blocked contacts list. That’s right, and that’s it.
The fact that Apple had to ship this new alert at all says something uncomfortable about how the company has handled the spam call problem, along with carriers and regulators.
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