Scenario 1
People interact directly with AI
For chatbots, AI assistants and other direct interactions, people must be informed that they are dealing with an AI system, unless this is obvious in context.
Article 50 AI Act
Many organisations do not fall directly under Annex III, but still need to make clear when people interact with AI or when content is generated or manipulated by AI. This is the Article 50 route.
Avoid treating a low-risk chatbot as Annex III, or reducing a high-risk use case to a simple disclosure.
Link the disclosure to the context: screen text, content label, machine-readable marking, internal instruction and review moment.
This page is written as practical guidance for legal teams, compliance teams, AI owners and decision-makers.
Article 50 contains several obligations for providers and deployers. Your role determines the evidence and implementation needed.
Scenario 1
For chatbots, AI assistants and other direct interactions, people must be informed that they are dealing with an AI system, unless this is obvious in context.
Scenario 2
For synthetic audio, image, video or text, outputs should be machine-readable and detectable as artificially generated or manipulated where technically feasible.
Scenario 3
When people are exposed to emotion recognition or biometric categorisation, the system operation must be disclosed and the GDPR route must be correct.
Scenario 4
Deepfakes and certain AI-generated text published to inform the public need clear disclosure, subject to specific exceptions.
Workflow
First check whether the system falls within one of the eight high-risk domains.
View Annex IIIRead Article 50 with internal explanation and cross-references.
Open Article 50Ensure teams know when transparency, human oversight and escalation are required.
View Article 4 evidenceDocument why the system is high-risk, limited-risk or minimal-risk.
Start risk assessmentNo. Article 50 sits next to the Annex III high-risk route. An AI system can be outside high-risk scope and still need a clear disclosure, label or detectable marking.
The route is relevant for direct interaction with AI, synthetic audio, image, video or text, emotion recognition, biometric categorisation, deepfakes and certain AI-generated text published to inform the public.
No. Start with classification: prohibited practice, Annex III high-risk, GPAI, Article 50 or minimal obligations. Transparency can then be a separate obligation or part of a wider high-risk route.
Document the AI system, provider and deployer roles, the relevant Article 50 scenario, the disclosure or marking used, when people receive that information and who reviews it periodically.
Start with a short risk assessment and then document the disclosures, labels, training and governance you actually need.