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Senate Bill 129 Alabama 2026 Session

Updated Feb 17, 2026
High Interest

Summary

Primary Sponsor
Tim Melson
Tim MelsonSenator
Republican
Session
2026 Regular Session
Title
Artificial intelligence; disclosure of artificial intelligence-generated content required, enforcement provided
Summary

SB129 would require Alabama-based developers of generative AI to disclose when content is AI-generated, with specific formatting and metadata, and it creates enforcement under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act with a private right of action, effective October 1, 2026.

What This Bill Does

Developers of generative AI systems would have to reveal when content is AI-generated. Disclosures must appear in the same format as the content, be conspicuous and understandable, and include metadata identifying AI-generation, the tool used, and the date/time created. Disclosures must be permanent or not easily removable by downstream users or licensees. Violations would be unlawful trade practices under Alabama law, enforceable by the Attorney General with a 30-day cure period, and injured parties would have a private right of action; the act becomes effective October 1, 2026.

Who It Affects
  • Developers of generative AI systems operating in Alabama — must include AI-generated content disclosures and metadata and implement protections to prevent removal by users or licensees.
  • End users and third-party licensees in Alabama — must not remove disclosures and must follow downstream protections (contracts, certifications, and potential termination of access) to ensure disclosures remain in place.
Key Provisions
  • Disclosures must clearly identify content as AI-generated and include metadata: tool used and creation date/time; disclosures must be permanent or not easily removable.
  • Disclosures must be clear and conspicuous according to the content's medium (visual only vs. visual+audible) and must not be contradicted by the content.
  • Developers and downstream parties must implement procedures to prevent removal of disclosures, including contracts requiring end users/licensees not to remove disclosures, certifications that disclosures will not be removed, and termination of access if removal occurs.
  • Enforcement and effective date: violations are unlawful trade practices; the Attorney General may issue a 30-day cure notice; injured parties may sue under the private right of action; the act takes effect on October 1, 2026.
AI-generated summary using openai/gpt-5-nano on Feb 12, 2026. May contain errors — refer to the official bill text for accuracy.
Subjects
Consumer Protection

Bill Actions

S

Pending Senate Judiciary

S

Read for the first time and referred to the Senate Committee on Judiciary

Bill Text

Documents

Source: Alabama Legislature