AI In Advertising

AI in Advertising: What’s Legal, What’s Risky, and What to Do Now

The Big Idea

AI in Advertising: What’s Working, What Needs a Lawyer, and What to Stop Now
A practical legal and strategy guide for Lowcountry marketers using AI in ad creation — May 2026.

12+
FTC “Operation AI Comply”
enforcement actions since 2024

June ’26
New York’s AI synthetic performer
disclosure law takes effect

$0
Copyright protection for purely
AI-generated ads — you may not own it

You
Hold the legal risk when AI tools
generate infringing ad content

AI has made it faster and cheaper than ever to create ads, visuals, copy, and campaigns. But the legal ground underneath it is shifting fast — and in 2026, “the AI made it” is no longer a defense. Lowcountry marketers who understand the rules will move faster. The ones who don’t will move backward.

Gaining Ground: AI Tools Earning Their Keep
✍️AI-Assisted Copy & Campaign Ideation

Using AI to generate first drafts of ad copy, email subject lines, social posts, and campaign concepts is low-risk and high-value — as long as a human reviews, edits, and directs. That human layer also matters legally: substantial human creative input is what makes AI-assisted work potentially copyrightable. Treat AI as a copywriter’s assistant, not a replacement. Edit meaningfully. The more human direction goes in, the stronger your ownership claim on the output.

Low risk, high value

🎯AI-Powered Audience Targeting & Personalization

Modern ad platforms — including what P&C offers through its first-party data stack — integrate AI to match messages to the right local households at the right moment. This is where the real ROI lives: not just generating content faster, but getting it in front of verified Lowcountry residents who actually match your buyer profile. Layer AI-driven personalization on top of trusted, first-party audience data rather than third-party cookie pools that are evaporating.

Strongest local edge

🖼️Licensed AI Image Platforms

Not all AI image tools carry the same risk. Platforms like Adobe Firefly and Getty’s AI generator are trained exclusively on licensed content, which significantly reduces copyright exposure for commercial use. If you’re generating visuals for ads, this distinction matters more than most marketers realize. Default to licensed-source AI image tools for anything running in paid media. Check platform indemnification terms before publishing commercially.

Safer for paid media

📊AI for Reporting & Campaign Analytics

Automated performance summaries, weekly metrics digests, and AI-written campaign recaps are well-established, lower-risk applications — and they reclaim real hours for your team every week. AI assembles the data story; a human makes the decisions. Build a standing workflow that pulls your key ad metrics weekly and drafts a plain-language summary. The FTC has no quarrel with internal efficiency tools.

Hours back every week

Holding Steady: Needs Guardrails, Not Elimination
⚖️AI-Generated Visuals in Ads — Own It or Risk It

Purely AI-generated images — no meaningful human editing — are not copyrightable under current U.S. Copyright Office standards. That means a competitor could use the same output. More critically, if your AI image resembles a protected work, a real person, or a trademarked character, you are holding the legal exposure — not the AI vendor. Always review AI-generated images for visual similarity to known brands, artists, or people before publishing. Add real human creative direction and editing — not just a prompt — to strengthen your ownership position. Document your process.

Document everything

🎙️AI-Generated Voices & Synthetic Performers

Voice cloning and synthetic spokespeople are powerful — and now specifically regulated. Starting June 2026, New York requires conspicuous disclosure when ads use AI-generated synthetic performers (digitally created humans that appear real). Violations carry civil penalties up to $5,000 per offense, with more states and federal action likely to follow. Get ahead of it: disclose AI-generated performers in your creative even in markets where it’s not yet legally required. In a relationship-driven market like Charleston, transparency is itself a competitive advantage.

Disclose now, not later

📋Vendor Terms & Indemnification — Read the Fine Print

Most AI platform terms push copyright and infringement risk back onto the user. If a rights holder sues over an AI-generated ad, the AI company is typically not your defense. Before you publish: Does your platform grant commercial rights to outputs? Does it cover paid media and broadcast? Does it indemnify you for copyright claims, or disclaim liability entirely? Build a simple intake log for any AI tool used in ad production — which platform, which plan, who wrote the prompts, where it will run. That documentation creates a defensible record if questions arise later.

You hold the risk

Losing Steam: Stop Doing These Now
🚫Claiming “Full AI Automation” Without Proof

The FTC’s enforcement pattern is clear: exaggerating what AI can do is a consumer protection violation. Operation AI Comply has targeted inflated capability claims, including a $48.6 million settlement over a company that promised “nearly 100%” automation when users had to do most tasks manually. If you’re advertising AI-powered services to clients or customers, apply the same standard you’d apply to any performance claim: have proof before you say it.

FTC enforcement target

🎨Mimicking Artists, Voices, or Recognizable Styles

“Inspired by” is not a legal standard. AI image generators trained on vast libraries can produce content that closely resembles protected works — and if that happens in your ad, the infringement exposure belongs to you, not the AI. Prompting a tool to generate something “in the style of” a known artist, or using a synthetic voice that sounds like a public figure, is a lawsuit waiting to happen in commercial advertising. Avoid it. Describe the aesthetic elements you want instead of referencing specific creators.

High litigation risk

🤖Publishing AI Content Without a Human Review Step

Every workflow that sends AI-generated content directly into the world — copy, images, claims, reviews — without a human checkpoint is a liability. The FTC has made clear there is no AI exemption from existing consumer protection laws, and AI-generated content that turns out to be false or misleading is still false and misleading. Always build a mandatory human review step into every AI content workflow, no exceptions.

No AI exemption exists

Local Example — Mount Pleasant

A Mount Pleasant home goods retailer wanted to cut production time on monthly email campaigns. They built a workflow using AI for first-draft copy layered onto P&C’s targeted email list to reach verified local homeowners. A human copywriter reviewed and localized every draft — checking accuracy and adding the brand voice AI alone couldn’t replicate. They used Adobe Firefly for lifestyle imagery (licensed source), documented their process, and disclosed AI use in internal production notes. Result: campaigns out in half the time, higher open rates from better audience targeting, and no legal exposure. The AI did the heavy lifting; the human kept the brand and the business protected.

AI Ad Use Case — Risk at a Glance
AI Use Case Risk Level Key Safeguard
Copy drafts + human editing 🟢 Low Human review before publish
Licensed AI image platforms 🟡 Low–Medium Verify platform indemnification
Generic AI image generators 🟠 Medium–High Check terms; document workflow
Synthetic voice / performer 🔴 High Disclose conspicuously
Style mimicry / voice cloning 🔴 Very High Avoid for commercial ads
AI-only content, no human review 🔴 High Always add human checkpoint

Implementation Checklist
  • Audit which AI tools your team currently uses in ad production
  • Confirm each platform’s commercial use rights and indemnification terms
  • Switch to licensed-source AI image tools (Firefly, Getty AI) for paid media
  • Add a mandatory human review step to every AI content workflow
  • Create an intake log: tool, plan, prompt author, reviewer, placement
  • Draft an internal disclosure policy for AI-generated performers
  • Review any existing marketing claims about AI capabilities for FTC compliance
  • Brief agency partners on your AI use standards and documentation requirements

Ready to build AI into your ad strategy — without the legal landmines?

AI is moving fast. The legal framework is moving almost as fast. The marketers who win won’t be the ones who use AI the most — they’ll be the ones who use it the most responsibly, with the right tools, the right partners, and verified local audience data underneath it all.

The Post and Courier Advertising team works with Lowcountry businesses every day on campaigns that combine smart targeting, trusted reach, and first-party data no algorithm can replicate. If you want to talk through building AI into your strategy the right way, we’re a good place to start.

📧 advertising@postandcourier.com

Sources: FTC.gov, ArentFox Schiff, Davis Wright Tremaine, U.S. Copyright Office, Congress.gov • May 2026
thebigidea — Post and Courier Advertising