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Media's AI Pivot
10JUN

Brussels moves Article 50 to December

3 min read
10:06UTC

The EU AI Omnibus, agreed in May, gives AI tools already in use until 2 December 2026 to meet Article 50 marking, four months later than the 2 August date Lowdown earlier reported as a single cliff.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Article 50 clock split in two: December for tools in use, August for any new generative-AI launch.

The EU AI Omnibus provisional agreement, reached in May, grandfathers AI systems already on the market before 2 August 2026, giving them until 2 December 2026 to meet the machine-readable marking requirement under Article 50 of the EU AI Act 1. Article 50 requires synthetic output, AI-generated audio, image, video or text, to carry a marking a machine can detect. This corrects what Lowdown told readers in updates #3 and #4, where we framed 2 August as a single hard cliff for EU broadcasters. For tools already in use, the operative deadline is now 2 December, so the broadcasters we described as scrambling have four more months than we reported.

The 2 August date still bites in one place. Any new generative-AI deployment launched after it gets no grandfathering and faces the standard immediately. A broadcaster running ChatGPT-driven content discovery today has until December; the same broadcaster shipping a synthetic-presenter product in September does not. The urgency has not vanished, it has moved from installed systems to new launches.

Spotify read this early and adopted DDEX, the recorded-music metadata standard, in May to carry AI-provenance flags through its existing licensing pipes . That is the compliant-by-design route the grandfathering now gives other firms more time to copy: thread provenance through metadata you already send, rather than retrofit a marking layer under deadline pressure. The Code of Practice that operationalises Article 50 was due to finalise in early June; as of 10 June no EU broadcaster has publicly signed it, and Meta has declined to sign the related General-purpose AI code.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In 2024 the European Union passed a law called the EU AI Act, which among other things requires that AI-generated content (videos, images, audio) must be labelled so that audiences know they are watching or hearing something made by a machine rather than a human. The labelling rule, found in Article 50 of the Act, was supposed to take effect on 2 August 2026. In May 2026 the EU passed an update to the AI Act called the AI Omnibus. It said that AI systems already in use before 2 August 2026 get an extra four months to comply; their labelling deadline is now 2 December 2026 instead. New AI deployments launched after 2 August still face the original deadline. As of 10 June 2026, no major EU broadcaster has yet publicly agreed to the voluntary Code of Practice that sets out how to implement the labelling rule, which means none of them are ahead of even the extended schedule.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The absence of any EU broadcaster from the Article 50 Code of Practice as of 10 June 2026 reflects two distinct structural barriers.

First, the Code of Practice requires machine-readable marking of AI-generated content, but no agreed technical standard exists for video provenance at the broadcast layer. Audio has DDEX; video does not have an equivalent metadata standard that travels with content across broadcast chains, streaming platforms, and CDNs (content delivery networks).

The lack of a video-provenance standard means broadcasters cannot sign the Code of Practice in good faith without committing to a technical implementation that does not yet exist.

Second, Akamai's 7 May 2026 deal with Anthropic positioned Akamai's edge network as a potential EU-local inference layer for broadcasters, but Akamai's provenance-marking capability for video is not yet production-ready. The infrastructure that would allow a broadcaster to mark and deliver AI-generated video content with Article 50-compliant provenance flags is commercially available in audio (via DDEX) but not in video at broadcast scale.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The absence of any EU broadcaster from the Article 50 Code of Practice as of 10 June means the summer 2026 FIFA World Cup broadcast window will carry AI-generated content without provenance marking, the scenario the European Federation of Journalists has publicly identified as highest-risk.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Opportunity

    The first EU broadcaster to sign the Article 50 Code of Practice gains early-adopter regulatory credit with EU AI Office auditors and differentiates its AI governance position from incumbents waiting for the December deadline.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The grandfathering structure creates an asymmetric compliance benefit for incumbents with existing AI deployments over new entrants, a structural pattern the GDPR enforcement cycle reproduced: large incumbents were fined, smaller entrants achieved compliance faster without legacy-system debt.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #5 · Runway names its buyers; FOX builds

EU AI Act tracker· 10 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Brussels moves Article 50 to December
The compliance deadline split rather than stopped, easing existing broadcaster tools while tightening any new generative-AI product launched after August.
Different Perspectives
RTL Group
RTL Group
RTL closed its Sky Deutschland acquisition on 1 June for €68m, less than half the €150m announced price, creating a 12.3-million-subscriber DACH entity with Bundesliga rights through 2029 and Netflix's primary DACH distribution partnership. The consolidated scale justifies AI production investment neither entity could have afforded separately.
ITV / Carolyn McCall
ITV / Carolyn McCall
McCall confirmed on 4 June that Sky talks are 'very much actively engaged', with the £1.6bn plus earn-out structure unchanged. ITV's AI strategy is effectively deferred to Comcast: if the deal closes, ITV inherits Sky's AI production stack without a separate procurement cycle.
European Commission / EU AI Act
European Commission / EU AI Act
The Omnibus provisional agreement reached in May 2026 grandfathers in-market AI systems until 2 December 2026, extending the effective Article 50 machine-readable-marking deadline by four months for existing deployments. No EU broadcaster has signed the Code of Practice, meaning incumbents are in-market without a disclosed compliance posture.
DAZN Group
DAZN Group
DAZN closed a $100m acquisition of ViewLift to own its US streaming infrastructure rather than rent it, and launched the integrated FIFA+ DTC service in the same window. The acquire move addresses a third-party dependency before DAZN inherits the Lenovo World Cup AI broadcast stack for an expected 6 billion viewers from 11 June.
FOX Entertainment / FoxNXT
FOX Entertainment / FoxNXT
FOX posted a VP, AI Production Support role on 3 June inside FoxNXT, its technology unit, scoping a central AI function across the full production chain without naming a vendor. The posting signals FOX is building capability governance before committing to a tool stack, the inverse sequence to BBC and Fremantle who joined the Runway customer list first.
Runway
Runway
Runway opened its European HQ in London on 1 June and named BBC, Fremantle, and WPP as enterprise customers alongside a $100m UK investment commitment. The disclosure positions Runway as the default generative-video substrate for European broadcasters and agencies at the same moment it serves Netflix and Disney in the US, concentrating production-AI access at a single US vendor.