Bill Text: CA AB2713 | 2025-2026 | Regular Session | Amended


Bill Title: California AI Transparency Act: system provenance data.

Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2)

Status: (Engrossed) 2026-06-17 - Read second time. Ordered to third reading. [AB2713 Detail]

Download: California-2025-AB2713-Amended.html

Amended  IN  Assembly  April 21, 2026
Amended  IN  Assembly  April 06, 2026
Amended  IN  Assembly  March 19, 2026

CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE— 2025–2026 REGULAR SESSION

Assembly Bill
No. 2713


Introduced by Assembly Member Wicks
(Coauthor: Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry)

February 20, 2026


An act to amend Section 22757.3.1 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to artificial intelligence.


LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


AB 2713, as amended, Wicks. California AI Transparency Act: system provenance data: inspection. data.
Existing law, the California AI Transparency Act, requires, among other things, a person that creates, codes, or otherwise produces a generative artificial intelligence (AI) system that has over 1,000,000 monthly visitors or users and is publicly accessible within the geographic boundaries of the state to make available an AI detection tool at no cost to the user. The act requires the AI detection tool to, among other things, allow a user to assess whether the image, video, or audio content was created or altered by that person’s generative AI system. Existing law makes the act operative on August 2, 2026.
The act requires a large online platform to allow a user to inspect all available system provenance data, as specified, in an easily accessible manner. The act specifies the means of inspection to include directly through the large online platform’s user interface, allowing a user to download a version of the content with its attached system provenance data, or providing a link to the content’s system provenance data, as specified. detect whether any provenance data that is compliant with widely adopted specifications adopted by an established standards-setting body is embedded into or attached to content distributed on the large online platform.

The bill would specify that the large online platform may satisfy the inspection requirement by any of the above-described means of allowing inspection. The bill would make the option of allowing the user to download a version of the content with its attached system provenance data subject to applicable federal copyright laws.

This bill would instead require a large online platform to detect any system provenance data that is embedded into, attached to, or associated with content, as specified.
The California AI Transparency Act requires a large online platform to provide a user interface that, among other things, makes certain information clearly and conspicuously available to users. The act requires that information to include whether provenance data or digital signatures are available.
This bill would instead require that information to include whether provenance data or digital signatures are embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with the content.
The California AI Transparency Act requires a large online platform to allow a user to inspect all available system provenance data that is compliant with widely adopted specifications adopted by an established standards-setting body in an easily accessible manner. The act specifies 3 means of inspection, including directly through the large online platform’s user interface, allowing a user to download a version of the content with its attached system provenance data, and providing a link to the content’s system provenance data displayed on an internet website or in another application either by the large online platform or a third party.
This bill would instead require a large online platform to allow a user to inspect any system provenance data that is embedded into, attached to, or associated with content, as specified. The bill would allow a large online platform to satisfy that requirement by any of the 3 means of inspection, as revised by the bill. The first would be by displaying the system provenance data directly through the large online platform’s user interface. The second would be by providing a link to an internet website or other application that displays the system provenance data, including a website or application operated by a third party. The third would be by allowing a user to download any provenance data embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with the content, subject to any applicable federal copyright laws, in a format that cannot be easily embedded into, attached to, or associated with unrelated content.
The California AI Transparency Act prohibits a large online platform from knowingly stripping provenance data or a digital signature, as specified, from content uploaded or distributed on the large online platform.
This bill would prohibit a large online platform from knowingly stripping provenance data or a digital signature that is downloaded from the large online platform.
Vote: MAJORITY   Appropriation: NO   Fiscal Committee: NO   Local Program: NO  

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:


SECTION 1.

 Section 22757.3.1 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:

22757.3.1.
 (a) A large online platform shall do all of the following:
(1) Detect whether any provenance data that is compliant with widely adopted specifications adopted by an established standards-setting body is embedded into or attached to is embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with content distributed on the large online platform.
(2) (A) Provide a user interface to disclose the availability of system provenance data that reliably indicates that the whether content was generated or substantially altered by a GenAI system or captured by a capture device.
(B) The user interface required by this paragraph shall make clearly and conspicuously available to users information sufficient to identify the content’s authenticity, origin, or history of modification, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
(i) Whether provenance data is available. embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with the content.
(ii) The name of the GenAI system or capture device that created or substantially altered the content, if applicable.
(iii) Whether any digital signatures are available. embedded into, attached, to, or otherwise associated with the content.
(3) Allow a user to inspect all available any system provenance data that is compliant with widely adopted specifications adopted by an established standards-setting body embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with the content in an easily accessible manner. The large online platform may satisfy this requirement by any of the following means:
(A) Allow the user to inspect Displaying the system provenance data directly through the large online platform’s user interface pursuant to paragraph (2).
(B) Providing a link to an internet website or other application that displays the system provenance data, including a website or application operated by a third party.

(B)Allow the

(C) Allowing a user to download a version of the content with its attached system provenance data, any provenance data embedded into, attached to, or otherwise associated with the content, subject to any applicable federal copyright laws. laws, in a format that cannot be easily embedded into, attached to, or associated with unrelated content.

(C)Provide a link to the content’s system provenance data displayed on an internet website or in another application provided either by the large online platform or a third party.

(b) A large online platform shall not, to the extent technically feasible, knowingly strip any system provenance data or digital signature that is compliant with widely adopted specifications adopted by an established standards-setting body from content uploaded or distributed on from content uploaded to, distributed on, or downloaded from the large online platform.
(c) This section does not require a large online platform to take any action with respect to provenance data, system provenance data, or digital signatures that are not compliant with widely adopted specifications issued by an established standards-setting body.

(c)

(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.

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