Anabelle Colaco
29 Dec 2025, 12:38 GMT+10
BEIJING, China: China is moving to place new guardrails around artificial intelligence systems that behave like people, publishing draft regulations aimed at tightening control over AI services designed to simulate human personalities and form emotional connections with users.
The proposed rules, released by China's cyber regulator for public consultation, highlight Beijing's determination to guide the rapid expansion of consumer-facing AI with stronger safety, ethical, and behavioural standards.
Under the draft framework, the measures would apply to AI products and services offered to the public in China that present simulated human personality traits, thinking patterns, or communication styles. The rules cover systems that interact emotionally with users through text, images, audio, video, or other formats.
A central focus of the proposal is the risk of excessive use and emotional dependence. Service providers would be required to warn users about overuse and to intervene when signs of addiction emerge. The draft specifies that companies must monitor user behaviour and step in if interactions become unhealthy.
The proposed regulations would also impose lifecycle accountability on AI providers. Companies would be expected to assume responsibility for safety from development through deployment and to establish mechanisms for algorithm reviews, data security, and the protection of personal information.
Psychological risks are addressed directly in the draft. Providers would need to identify user states, assess emotional responses, and evaluate levels of reliance on the AI service. If users display extreme emotions or addictive behaviour, companies would be required to take "necessary measures" to intervene.
In addition to user well-being, the draft sets out explicit boundaries on content and conduct. AI services must not generate material that endangers national security, spreads rumours or promotes violence or obscenity, reinforcing long-standing regulatory red lines for digital content in China.
Get a daily dose of Beijing Bulletin news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Beijing Bulletin.
More InformationNEW YORK CITY, New York: New York will soon require prominent mental health warnings on social media platforms that use features designed...
BEIJING, China: China is moving to place new guardrails around artificial intelligence systems that behave like people, publishing...
BEIJING, China: Foreign smartphone makers saw a sharp rebound in China last month, with shipments more than doubling from a year earlier...
BRUSSELS, Belgium: The Trump administration's decision to impose travel bans on five Europeans has been met with the expected anger...
BEIJING, China: China said it expects companies involved in negotiations over TikTok's U.S. operations to pursue solutions that respect...
SANTA CLARA, California: Nvidia has struck a deal with artificial intelligence startup Groq to license its chip technology and bring...
BEIJING, China: China is moving to place new guardrails around artificial intelligence systems that behave like people, publishing...
ALWAR, Rajasthan: For global beverage makers operating in India, regulatory hurdles are nothing new. But in Rajasthan, one of the country's...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: A powerful rally across precious metals gathered fresh momentum on December 26, with silver vaulting past...
NEW DELHI, India: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on December 24 launched a next-generation US communication satellite,...
BEIJING, China: Foreign smartphone makers saw a sharp rebound in China last month, with shipments more than doubling from a year earlier...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: The arrival of new appetite-suppressing weight-loss pills is expected to speed up changes already underway...
