TikTok has announced an additional $200,000 investment to support AI media literacy programmes across Sub-Saharan Africa. The video platform shared this during its third annual Safer Internet Summit in Nairobi.
The new funding, provided as ad credits to local organisations working on digital literacy and misinformation, brings the company’s total AI literacy investment to $2.2 million since launching the global fund in November 2025.
The announcement came on Monday at the two-day summit hosted in Kenya under the theme #SaferTogether: ‘Innovation and Safety’.
The event brought together government officials, regulators, online safety partners, and industry leaders to discuss digital safety challenges across the region.

Expanding support for fact-checking and youth education
TikTok has initially supported three organisations in Sub-Saharan Africa through its $2 million global AI Literacy Fund. The recipients are:
- Mtoto News in Kenya, which produces educational content to help young people understand AI technology.
- Africa Check, which is expanding its fact-checking efforts across Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya, to assist audiences in identifying AI-generated misinformation and deepfakes.
- The Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID)’s DUBAWA platform, which works to combat information disorder across Africa.
The additional $200,000 will enable more local organisations to join these efforts.
“With the rapid advancement of AI, we are committed to educating our community online, so they feel empowered to have responsible experiences with AI, whether that’s as viewers or creators,”said Valiant Richey, global head of partnerships, elections, and market integrity at TikTok.

Kenya’s Cabinet Secretary for Information Communication and Technology, William Kabogo, opened the summit, emphasising the government’s commitment to “advancing digital innovation, responsible AI governance, and strong regional partnerships for a secure and thriving online ecosystem.”
Why AI literacy matters for African users
The investment addresses growing concerns about AI-generated misinformation across Africa. With over 100 million pieces of content uploaded daily to TikTok, the platform faces mounting pressure to help users distinguish between authentic and AI-generated material.
According to TikTok’s Community Guidelines Enforcement report for Q3 2025, the platform removed over 14 million videos across Sub-Saharan Africa, with 96.7% detected and removed proactively using automated technology.
TikTok also shared updates on its transparency measures, including requirements for creators to label realistic AI-generated content, advanced detection technology, and partnerships with the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity to identify and label AI content across platforms.

The summit series started in Ghana in 2024, continued in Cape Town in 2025, and is now in Nairobi in 2026, reflecting TikTok’s deepening partnerships with governments and regulators across Sub-Saharan Africa to address digital safety challenges.
The additional funding comes as African markets grapple with rising concerns about deepfakes, election misinformation, and AI-generated content spreading faster than fact-checkers can address it.
