TikTok is launching an in-app AI literacy hub for users in South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya as part of a wider set of AI announcements the company made at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, spanning content authenticity standards, watermarking, expanded spam detection and creator tools.
The hub, announced this week, is designed to help users recognize AI-generated content and understand how AI tools are being used on the platform, and forms part of TikTok’s AI Literacy Fund — a programme launched in November 2025 that the company says has now attracted more than $4 million in committed investment. TikTok said the fund’s African partnerships have already generated more than 200 million views, working with Moxi Africa in South Africa; the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development, Africa Check and Paradigm Initiative in Nigeria; and Eveminet and Mtoto News in Kenya.
The company has also partnered with the National Association for Media Literacy Education and AI expert Henry Ajder on a guide to responsible AI tool use for its wider community.
“We believe people should have context, confidence and control over their experiences with AI on TikTok,” said Tom Varghese, AI lead for TikTok’s global public policy team. “We continue to invest in technologies, partnerships and educational resources that help people spot AI-generated content, understand how it’s created, and use these tools creatively and responsibly.”
Alongside the literacy push, TikTok said it has joined the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity Steering Committee — the industry body shaping standards for content authenticity — and is now working with partners to accelerate broader adoption of Content Credentials across the digital ecosystem. The company said more than three billion videos have been labeled as AI-generated content to date using its combination of Content Credentials, creator disclosure tools and invisible watermarking.
TikTok also outlined an expansion of its detection systems targeting accounts dedicated to posting AI-generated spam, describing the effort as part of an ongoing arms race between platforms and mass-production content operations. The company said it removed more than 86 million fake accounts globally in the first quarter of 2026 as it continued to strengthen its detection capabilities.
On the creator side, TikTok said it was continuing to invest in AI tools including Smart Split and AI Outline, alongside features like Manage Topics that give users greater control over how much AI-generated content they see. The company pointed to African creators — including Tonnee Ndungu and Nyandia Gachago in Kenya, Olayemi Afolabi and Comfort Obiagbaoso in Nigeria, and Motso Mike and Akhil in South Africa — as examples of the ways local users are integrating AI into storytelling, education and creative expression on the platform.
The announcements sit against a widening AI-literacy gap on the continent. Research covered by iAfrica last week highlighted the extent of the divide in South Africa, where a national survey found the term “AI” barely registered for 73% of respondents. TikTok’s push is one of several corporate initiatives aiming to close that gap, alongside efforts by Google, Microsoft and Meta — though none of the platforms have released independent evaluations of whether their literacy interventions meaningfully shift user understanding of AI-generated content.





