FilmMovieStudio creates images, video, music and text with artificial intelligence. The EU has rules for that — Regulation (EU) 2024/1689, the AI Act — and this page explains, in plain language, what Studio does for you automatically and what remains your responsibility when you publish what you make.
Last updated: 5 July 2026.
What Studio does for you automatically
You don't need to configure anything — every copy of Studio complies out of the box.
Your AI creations are labeled inside the file
Every image, video, music track and voiceover you generate in Studio carries an invisible, machine-readable label saying it was created with AI — embedded in the file itself, using the industry-standard formats (XMP metadata with the IPTC "trainedAlgorithmicMedia" designation, and provenance tags in audio/video containers):
- Images (PNG, JPEG, WebP, GIF, SVG) — labeled with zero quality loss; your pixels are untouched.
- Video & audio (MP4, MOV, MP3, WAV and more) — labeled without re-encoding.
- Documents & spreadsheets (DOCX, XLSX) — labeled in the document properties; PDFs carry a small provenance note on the last page.
The label survives your editing: trimming clips, color grading, rotating images, extracting frames or audio, and rendering your final film all carry it forward. Files you import — your own photos and footage — are never labeled: only AI-generated content is.
This is exactly what Article 50(2) of the AI Act requires from 2 August 2026. You're covered.
A visible "AI generated" badge — when you want it
The invisible label satisfies the law's requirement on us. But when you publish a video that shows real-looking people, places or events, the law asks you to disclose visibly that it's AI-made (more below). To make that a one-click job, Studio can burn a small "AI generated" badge into the corner of your rendered videos — turn it on in Settings → About → AI transparency.
You always know you're talking to an AI
Studio's chat is an AI system, and it says so right under the input — along with a reminder that generated content can be inaccurate. No dark patterns, no pretending.
We never strip anyone's credentials
If a model provider already embeds content credentials (like C2PA or SynthID) in what it returns, Studio preserves them. Our labeling only ever adds information.
What YOU need to do when you publish
Two duties in the AI Act fall on the person who publishes AI content — you, not us. They apply from 2 August 2026:
- Deepfakes must be visibly disclosed. If your creation shows real people, places or events in a way that looks authentic, you must make clear it's artificially generated — a visible label, a caption, a note in the description. Studio's badge option (above) is the easy way.
- AI-written text on matters of public interest must be disclosed too, unless a human editor takes responsibility for it.
And one rule for everyone: don't remove the embedded AI labels from generated files. They're there to keep the content ecosystem honest — and stripping them can put you on the wrong side of the rules that protect you as a creator too.
That's it. For a filmmaker, artist or marketer making creative work, nothing else in the AI Act applies to you as a Studio user.
Where Studio itself stands under the AI Act
For the curious — how the regulation classifies what we do:
| The AI Act asks | FilmMovieStudio |
|---|---|
| Is it a banned AI practice (social scoring, manipulation, …)? | No — nothing of the sort, ever. |
| Is it "high-risk" (hiring, credit, policing, …)? | No — a creative tool is not a high-risk use case. |
| Does it generate synthetic content? | Yes — so the transparency rules (Article 50) apply, and we implement them fully (everything described above). |
| Does it train its own general-purpose AI models? | No — we build on models from providers like Google, OpenAI and Anthropic, who carry their own obligations (all three have signed the EU's GPAI Code of Practice). |
Key dates, for reference: the AI Act entered into force on 1 August 2024; bans and AI-literacy duties applied from 2 February 2025; model-provider obligations from 2 August 2025; and the transparency rules described on this page apply from 2 August 2026. Studio ships compliant ahead of that date.
Official resources
- The EU AI Act explained — European Commission overview
- Code of Practice on marking AI-generated content — the standard our labeling follows
- AI Act Service Desk — official Q&A and compliance checker
- European AI Office — the enforcement body
Questions about how Studio handles AI transparency? Contact us — we're happy to explain any of it in more depth.
This page describes how FilmMovieStudio approaches the EU AI Act. It is provided for your information and is not legal advice for your own publishing obligations.