Copy-paste badges for transparently disclosing how AI tools were used in your work: emails, websites, documents, slide decks, and repos.
Select a badge above, then copy the HTML embed code and paste it anywhere in an email, webpage, or document that supports HTML.
Download the SVG or PNG and upload it to your own server, CDN, or drag it directly into Notion, Google Docs, or Figma.
Reference an existing badge file directly from this repo using the Markdown snippet, or copy a raw URL like:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mau-vera/built-with-ai-badges/main/badges/writing/ai-assisted--claude.svg
Paste the HTML snippet into your signature editor (Gmail → Settings → Signature, Outlook → New Signature). Most clients that support HTML signatures will render the badge inline.
Download the SVG or PNG and insert it directly into AI-generated output: infographics, blog post headers, slide decks, social posts, documentation. A small badge in the corner or footer tells your audience what they're engaging with, without interrupting the content.
Use any past participle that accurately describes what happened: AI Outlined, AI Captioned, Transcript: AI Cleaned, Cover: AI Generated. The goal is accuracy, not compliance with a list.
AI disclosure doesn't mean you did something wrong. It means your audience knows what they're engaging with. Just like a nutrition label doesn't judge the food, a badge doesn't judge the work; it just tells people what went into it. Your audience can decide for themselves how much weight to give it.
Today most people lie about how they use AI or try to pass AI-generated content as their own. Journalist Mike Elgan argues that disclosure is the answer: when you label your work consistently, you give your audience the context to make sense of what they're engaging with, and you become part of a counter-current to all the content that doesn't. A small badge takes two seconds and says: I'm being straight with you about how this was made.
It is an honor system. There's no validator, no compliance checklist, no badge police. Just a lightweight, voluntary way to say: here's how AI was involved.
Browse the full gallery for more examples.