
Artificial intelligence is rapidly changing the future of broadcasting across Africa. Still, industry leaders say the technology must be implemented responsibly, transparently, and with strong human oversight if broadcasters are to maintain audience trust and regulatory compliance.
These were among the key conclusions from the recent webinar “AI and Broadcast Compliance: What Players Must Know About Emerging Regulations,” hosted on 12 May 2026.
The Pan-African virtual event brought together regulators, broadcasters, journalists, and AI specialists from across the continent to discuss how AI is transforming content creation, newsroom operations, audience engagement, and broadcast compliance frameworks.
During the webinar, panellists explored the increasing use of AI across broadcasting workflows, including automated subtitling, multilingual localisation, synthetic voice technology, audience analytics, content moderation, script support, and production research.
Speakers noted that AI is already delivering significant operational efficiencies for broadcasters, particularly in pre-production, newsroom support, and multilingual content delivery. However, they also warned that many organisations are adopting AI technologies faster than they are developing the governance structures needed to manage associated risks.
A major focus of the discussion was the growing importance of transparency in AI-assisted broadcasting. Panellists stressed that audiences should be informed whenever content has been generated, altered, or materially assisted by artificial intelligence technologies.
The webinar also highlighted the challenges posed by algorithmic bias and the underrepresentation of African languages and cultures in global AI systems. Participants warned that many AI models currently in use worldwide are trained predominantly on datasets from the Global North, posing serious risks of cultural misinterpretation and inaccurate moderation of African content.
Experts called for greater collaboration between broadcasters, regulators, universities, governments, and technology developers to build indigenous African datasets and more culturally representative AI systems.
The discussion further examined the rise of AI-generated misinformation, deepfakes, synthetic presenters, and cloned voices, with speakers warning that these technologies could undermine credibility and public trust if left unchecked.
Real-world examples shared during the session demonstrated how broadcasters are balancing innovation with editorial responsibility. Tunji Adebakin explained how AI tools have significantly accelerated research and workflow processes at Ultima Studios while maintaining strict human editorial oversight before any content reaches audiences.
Panellists agreed that human review remains essential throughout every stage of AI-assisted broadcasting — from research and scripting to compliance verification and final editorial approval.
The webinar also explored the evolving regulatory environment surrounding AI in African broadcasting markets, with participants acknowledging that many existing regulations were not originally designed to address synthetic content, AI-generated media, and automated decision-making systems.
To access the summary document on the BMA, please click HERE.












