Introduction: AI-Generated Content Is Everywhere — But It Comes with Risks
The rise of artificial intelligence has revolutionized the way businesses create and manage digital content. As of 2024, over 45% of marketing teams are actively using generative AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Jasper to create website copy, blog posts, product descriptions, and more (Salesforce). Meanwhile, Gartner predicts that by 2026, 80% of content on the internet will be AI-generated. While this technological shift improves efficiency, it also introduces serious risks to website integrity compliance efforts, and brand trust.
Among the key concerns:
Hallucinations and Factual Errors: AI-generated content can confidently present false or misleading information, potentially harming credibility and customer trust.
Copyright and Legal Exposure: AI content may include plagiarized material or inadvertently reproduce proprietary data, opening businesses up to legal scrutiny.
SEO and Brand Consistency Risks: If AI-generated updates go live without human review, they can dilute SEO performance or confuse audiences.
While all businesses face potential risks from unmonitored AI-generated content, certain industries carry heightened exposure due to the nature of the information they publish. For these sectors, even a minor error or misinformation can have outsized consequences.
Healthcare: Medical websites, health systems, and wellness platforms must maintain factual, regulatory-compliant information. AI-generated inaccuracies could lead to patient harm, liability exposure, or violations of HIPAA and FDA advertising standards.
Financial Services: Banks, lenders, and fintech companies must adhere to strict disclosure rules. Incorrect rates, compliance language, or misleading terms created by AI can trigger legal action and damage consumer trust.
Legal Services: Law firms and legal content providers risk serious professional liability if AI tools hallucinate inaccurate legal advice, misstate statutes, or misattribute case law on public-facing web pages.
News and Media: Publishers using AI for content generation must guard against spreading misinformation, misquoting sources, or producing biased or inaccurate reporting—risks that can erode public credibility.
E-Commerce: AI-generated product descriptions or policy pages could contain misleading claims, incorrect pricing, or contradictory return terms, which may lead to consumer complaints or regulatory penalties.
How Website Monitoring Software Solves AI Content Risks
ChangeTower and other website change monitoring tools offer businesses a simple yet powerful way to track, document, and respond to changes in digital content — whether those changes are human- or AI-generated. Here’s how monitoring software can help manage the risks associated with AI content:
1. Monitor for Unauthorized or Unreviewed Content Updates
Change monitoring software allows businesses to receive real-time alerts when pages are updated, even if a team member or AI system pushes changes without centralized approval. This can prevent unvetted AI copy from going live unnoticed.
2. Identify Inaccurate or Off-Brand Messaging
Track specific keywords or phrases across your website to detect when problematic language appears. For example, if an AI tool mistakenly updates a policy page with incorrect legal disclaimers, monitoring software will notify you immediately.
3. Track Changes on Competitor or Industry Pages
Website monitoring isn’t just for your own properties. Set up alerts for updates on competitors’ product pages or industry sources to track how other companies are integrating AI content — and keep your messaging aligned or differentiated as needed.
4. Maintain an Audit Trail of AI-Driven Changes
ChangeTower automatically logs page changes and screenshots, creating a transparent version history. This helps teams investigate content shifts and determine whether AI or a human user introduced them — a critical step for accountability in regulated industries.
5. Localize Monitoring for Global Sites
If you’re deploying AI content across multiple geographic regions, monitoring software can track page versions from different IPs or languages. This ensures that global content changes — potentially made by location-specific AI models — are consistent with corporate guidelines and local compliance requirements.
Adam Hausman has worked with ChangeTower since its founding in 2018 and is passionate about the potential of website monitoring software in industries including SEO, compliance monitoring, competitive intelligence, and more. Also founder of Greenlight Growth Marketing, he holds degrees from Indiana University (BA English/Psychology 2008) and the University of Illinois-Chicago (M.Ed. Secondary Education 2012). He lives in Maine with his wife, 2 kids, and 2 annoying cats.
Adam Hausman