As AI-assisted content becomes the norm, clear disclosure is becoming both a legal expectation and a trust signal. This AI disclosure label generator turns a few selections — what you made, which tool you used, and how involved the AI was — into a ready-to-paste label, in short, standard, and formal variants, aligned with the spirit of the EU AI Act, FTC guidance, and major platform transparency rules.
How it works
Pick your content type, name the AI tool, and choose the level of involvement on a simple scale from lightly assisted to substantially AI-generated. The tool selects accurate verbs and framing for each combination — “assisted” wording for human work that AI helped polish, “generated” wording for content a model produced with human review — then renders three label lengths. The short version is a compact badge for captions and bylines, the standard version is a single transparent sentence for footers, and the formal version is a fuller statement suited to a report’s methodology note or a regulated publication. You also get a plain-text and an HTML form so it drops cleanly wherever you publish.
Everything is assembled locally from your choices, so nothing you enter is uploaded or stored.
Tips and examples
Match the claim to reality. A photo you shot and lightly retouched with an AI tool is “AI-assisted”, not “AI-generated”; a fully synthetic image is the reverse. Overclaiming AI involvement can read as a gimmick, while underclaiming can mislead and erode trust — both defeat the purpose of a disclosure.
Place the label where a reasonable reader will see it before consuming the content, not buried at the very bottom. For images, that usually means the caption or an on-image badge; for articles, a line near the byline or in the footer; for reports, a short methodology paragraph. When in doubt for regulated or high-stakes content, treat this label as a starting draft and have counsel confirm the exact wording and placement.