Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Media's AI Pivot
28JUN

EU finalises its AI content-marking Code

3 min read
08:57UTC

The European Commission finalised its Code of Practice on marking AI-generated content on 10 June, completing a rulebook that applies from 2 August with no media company yet signed.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

The EU finalised its AI content-marking Code, applying from 2 August, with the editorial-responsibility carve-out the key clause for broadcasters.

The European Commission finalised its Code of Practice on marking and labelling of AI-generated content on Wednesday 10 June, after the closing plenary 1. The Code is a voluntary framework signatories can use to show compliance with the EU AI Act, the bloc's law governing artificial intelligence. It now goes through an adequacy assessment by The Commission and the AI Board, the EU body overseeing the Act, and applies from 2 August 2026, 46 days away for new systems. Deployers must label AI-generated text on matters of public interest, unless that text sits under human editorial responsibility 2.

The finalisation completes a marking framework that has been assembling for months. The EU AI Omnibus gave systems already on the market until 2 December to carry machine-readable marks , and Spotify adopted the DDEX metadata standard, an industry format for tagging tracks, to flag AI-generated music ahead of the rules . Those earlier moves were anticipating exactly this rulebook, and both bought the affected companies a softer landing than the new-system Deadline allows.

The Code exempts text produced under human editorial sign-off from the labelling duty, the clause that brings the framework into a working newsroom. A broadcaster's compliance posture turns on where it draws the line between machine output and human responsibility. Sign-up is open and no media company has yet signed, which is itself a leading indicator: in this beat, Code signatories versus non-signatories separate the companies that have built synthetic-content governance from those still deciding. France Televisions naming its vendors is one reading of how an early mover prepares; an unsigned register five weeks before the Deadline is the other.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Commission finalised a set of rules on 10 June that will require companies deploying AI to label content generated by AI systems. The rules apply from 2 August 2026 for new AI deployments. Existing AI systems already on the market before that date have until December 2026 to comply, under a grace period agreed separately. The labelling requirement covers AI-generated text about public interest topics, such as news articles or political commentary, unless a human editor has taken responsibility for the content. Companies can sign up voluntarily now; signing lets them demonstrate to regulators that they are following the rules. No major European broadcaster or media company had signed by the time the Code was finalised.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    EU media companies without signed Code of Practice compliance by 2 August 2026 face reputational exposure when the AI Board's adequacy assessment concludes; mandatory conversion of the Code is the Commission's stated next step if uptake is insufficient.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The human-editorial-responsibility exemption is undefined in technical terms; broadcasters deploying AI-assisted news summaries reviewed by a journalist face legal uncertainty about whether their content requires labelling.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The Code's Article 50 compliance pathway is the first operational instrument linking voluntary AI-content disclosure to a legal safe harbour; future mandatory conversion would retain this pathway, making early adopters structurally advantaged in regulatory proceedings.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #6 · Fox buys Roku's data layer for $22bn

European Commission· 17 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Media buy-vs-build strategists
Media buy-vs-build strategists
IBC's nominee list and FOX's producer-level FoxNXT hiring show rights-holders choosing between buying agentic tools from named vendors or building them in-house. They read Fox's quiet hiring and the IBC pairings as the reference signals that will shape their own procurement decisions this quarter.
Eurovision Sport and European Athletics
Eurovision Sport and European Athletics
Eurovision Sport and European Athletics ran every AI commentary stream at the U18 Championships labelled as AI-generated from 16 July, ahead of Article 50's 2 August requirement. They expect the model to extend to the senior Birmingham championships in August, pending operational sign-off.
Camb.AI and WSC Sports
Camb.AI and WSC Sports
Camb.AI supplied labelled AI commentary for Eurovision Sport's Rieti championships, while WSC Sports packaged its Magicrop clip-cutting into a TikTok distribution deal on 10 July. Both vendors gain reference customers and pricing power precisely while incumbent broadcasters stay unsigned on EU labelling and undecided on build-versus-buy.
European Commission and Paramount Skydance
European Commission and Paramount Skydance
The European Commission cleared the deal's $24bn Gulf financing under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation on 14 July, while Paramount pressed its case that the state suit is a flawed application of antitrust law. Both expect the merger to close once the 22 July competition ruling and any US injunction resolve.
Rob Bonta and the twelve-state coalition
Rob Bonta and the twelve-state coalition
Twelve Democratic state attorneys general, led by California's Rob Bonta, sued in San Francisco on 13 July seeking a TRO to block the Paramount-WBD merger, arguing federal clearance does not resolve state-level antitrust claims. They expect the suit to bite even without a final win, by holding the deal shut past Brussels' 22 July ruling.
Red Bull Ventures
Red Bull Ventures
Red Bull Ventures joined TwelveLabs' $100m Series B on 1 July to back its sports-video vertical, the one capital move that shipped on schedule this fortnight. Investing in the vendor layer rather than waiting on regulators lets it back the tooling broadcasters queue behind Brussels and the FCC to use.