I'm not for AI as a creative disruptor; however, this is going to be difficult to enforce given how "AI" has been and continues to penetrate all aspects of content development from brainstorming (story and character ideas, pick lists, random generator tables, concept sketches), working in Adobe that includes AI, Google that forces AI for searching, productivity enhancements, prototyping and drag and drop layouts, code hints and debugging, spelling and grammar editing, AI Agents that can create and provide testing or editing feedback to mostly functional programs and whole publications in a few hours that you can then repurpose as your own outside of the AI tool, and such to the finished product. Where is the line or is there a line and how can this be enforced effectively and equitably?
Viewing post in Generative AI Disclosure tagging
See my post here about enforcement: https://itch.io/post/11423454
Short answer: don’t worry about it, it’s just a tag.
No, you've forgotten something important. Read this:
Types of Artificial Intelligence (AI) - GeeksforGeeks
Understand it is the same as this:
12 Types of Malware + Examples That You Should Know | CrowdStrike