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Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai delivers the keynote address at the Google I/O developers conference at Shoreline Amphitheatre on May 10, 2023 in Mountain View, California. 
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Google will embed information called a markup inside images created by its AI models, in order to warn people that they were originally created by a computer, it said on Wednesday.

The data inside the images won’t be visible to the human eye, but software like Google Search will be able to read it and will then display a label warning users. Google will also provide additional information about all AI-generated images to help prevent deception, including when the image was first uploaded to the search engine and whether it’s been cited by news sites.

“Image self-labeled as AI generated,” reads one example warning provided by Google.

The move is the most significant effort by a big technology company so far to label and classify output from so-called generative AI. Officials and technology workers have warned that the technology’s capabilities to create realistic images or fluent passages of text could help spammers, scammers, and propagandists fool people.

For example, a recent generated image of Pope Francis in a stylish winter jacket generated on the Midjourney app went viral and fooled some people into thinking it was real.

One issue facing the AI industry is that there is no reliable way to determine generated images. While there are often some clues, like badly drawn hands, there isn’t a definitive way to say which images were made by a computer and which were drawn or photographed by a human.

Google’s approach is to label the images when they come out of the AI system, instead of trying to determine whether they’re real later on. Google said that Shutterstock and Midjourney would support this new markup approach. Google developer documentation says that the markup will be able to categorize images as trained algorithmic media, which was made by an AI model, a composite image that was partially made with an AI model, or algorithmic media, which was created by a computer but isn’t based on training data.

Google held its annual developer’s conference on Wednesday, where it announced a $1,799 folding phone, and additional AI features for other Google products, including an image generator.