# regulation
Latest news and articles about regulation
Total: 43 articles found

When Your Face Becomes a Template: The Rising Cost of AI ‘Face‑Swaps’ and the Fragility of Rights
Generative AI has made convincing face‑swap videos cheap to produce but costly to contest, creating widespread harm to celebrities, IP owners and ordinary people. Legal, technical and market remedies are emerging, yet enforcement remains complex and slow, leaving victims exposed while platforms and model builders search for a workable balance between innovation and rights protection.

When Faces Become Templates: The Rising Cost of AI Deepfakes for Stars — and Ordinary People
AI face‑swap tools have turned real people’s videos into reusable templates at minimal cost, leaving victims — from influencers to global studios — to shoulder complex and expensive battles to prove harm. The imbalance between cheap creation and costly enforcement is accelerating calls for legal reform, licensing deals and technical safeguards to protect personal likenesses and IP.

Coconut-Drink Maker’s Sexist Stunts Keep Backfiring: How Yeshui Treats Fines as Free Publicity
Yeshui Group sparked a fresh backlash after factory banners bluntly sexualised female employees and linked breast size to coconut juice. The incident continues a pattern of provocative campaigns that have repeatedly drawn fines and online condemnation, highlighting the costs of shock-driven marketing in China’s increasingly scrutinised consumer environment.

OpenAI Says It Has Secured $110 Billion in Fresh Investment — A Game‑Changer for the AI Race
OpenAI has announced $110 billion in new investment, a claim that—pending disclosure of investors and terms—would dramatically reshape the AI industry. The capital would strengthen OpenAI's technical lead but also raise competition, governance and regulatory challenges.

Beijing Tightens Disclosure Rules for Private Funds, Bans Performance Forecasts and Return Guarantees
China’s securities regulator has issued new measures to tighten disclosure and curb misleading marketing by private funds, banning performance forecasts and guarantees of principal or minimum returns. The rules, effective September 1, 2026, strengthen custodial review, reporting obligations and enforcement powers, and are likely to raise compliance costs while improving investor protection and market credibility.

Trip.com’s Windfall and the Hotel Squeeze: Stellar Profits Meet Antitrust Heat
Trip.com reported strong 2025 results with revenue of 624 billion yuan and net profit of 334 billion yuan, buoyed by a large one‑off investment gain. The company’s persistently high margins have strained upstream hotels and homestays, prompting an antitrust investigation and boardroom departures. Regulators are signalling a push to rebalance profits across the travel ecosystem, creating an uncertain outlook for Trip.com’s margin sustainability.

Anthropic Backs Away: Safety Pledge Softened as Competition and Policy Uncertainty Bite
Anthropic has watered down its 2023 Responsible Scaling Policy, dropping a blanket pledge to pause model scaling when safety cannot be proven and replacing it with conditional delays tied to competitive position. The change reflects commercial pressures, a fragmented U.S. regulatory landscape and an intensifying race among leading AI developers.

Robotaxis on the Road: Rapid Roll‑out Meets a Reality Check on Safety
Robotaxi deployments are accelerating worldwide and in China in 2026 as firms from Tesla to Baidu scale fleets and raise capital. However, a series of fires, collisions and sensor failures has exposed technical, regulatory and operational gaps that make widespread public trust premature. The sector’s commercial promise is real, but moving from pilots to safe, public‑facing services depends on tougher oversight, open data and demonstrable improvements in handling rare and hazardous scenarios.

ByteDance Pulls Doubao’s Live Video Calls — A Pause That Reveals China’s Tightrope on AI Interactivity
ByteDance has temporarily suspended Doubao’s video‑call feature, reflecting concerns about moderation, privacy, and operational costs tied to real‑time generative audiovisual interactions. The pause signals how Chinese tech firms are balancing product innovation with regulatory compliance and reputational risk as they race to match advanced Western AI models.

AI Insiders Sound the Alarm as U.S. Start‑ups Pivot from Safety to Speed
Senior researchers exiting US AI companies have publicly warned that commercialization and IPO pressures are sidelining safety, risking manipulative or harmful model behaviour. The conflict between monetisation incentives and the need for interpretability, privacy safeguards and robust alignment work has produced real‑world moderation failures and could invite regulatory intervention.

When an Egg Becomes Premium: How ‘Functional’ Labels Repriced China’s Staple
China’s egg market has fractured into multiple price tiers as producers and retailers attach nutrient and production‑process labels to ordinary eggs. The premium reflects real feed and logistics costs for some features and ambiguous, often unverifiable claims for others; regulatory tightening in 2025 is beginning to force a reckoning over which labels correspond to enduring supply‑chain investments.

Regulators Target Gaode’s Ride‑hailing Aggregator — China’s on‑demand transport market faces a reset
Chinese regulators summoned Gaode Dache on 9 February 2026, criticising partner management, fare suppression and emergency response. The confrontation exposes structural weaknesses of the aggregation model and signals a regulatory pivot toward pre‑emptive ecosystem governance that will raise costs and reshape ride‑hailing economics.