Based only on the title, the article reports that Douyin is seeking “AI video talent,” likely targeting creators skilled in AI-assisted video production. The framing suggests QbitAI sees this as more than a routine creator campaign, presenting it as a possible way for creators to capture value from AI tools. No specific program details, eligibility rules, compensation, models, or product features are provided in the available source text.
QbitAI reports that Xiaohongshu is testing RED Skill, letting creators attach AI Skills directly under posts. Users can open a Skill page and copy it into assistants such as Codex, Claude Code, or OpenClaw. Nearly 1,000 original Skills have appeared during testing, spanning PPTs, interviews, papers, fitness, travel, and lifestyle use cases, with broader creator rollout expected in July.
ElevenLabs introduced ElevenMusic, an AI-powered music discovery and creation platform built on its fully licensed music model. Users can remix discovered tracks by changing genre or tempo, or start from lyrics, melodies, and moods to create full songs. The launch emphasizes artist collaboration, fan participation, publishing, and monetization, with over 4,000 independent and emerging artists already involved.
The Verge’s Stepback newsletter frames AI content creators as an increasingly subtle presence online. Early AI influencers were easier to identify, but the article argues that this is changing as generated personas and content become more convincing. The piece is best read as commentary on authenticity, media literacy, and the creator economy rather than a product or model announcement.