Meta Oversight Board: AI Models Avoid Criticizing China and Saudi Arabia

Meta's Oversight Board found that leading AI models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and others refuse to criticize restrictive governments like China and Saudi Arabia at much higher rates. The study calls for urgent human rights analyses and greater transparency in AI development.

By Inside AI Editorial Team July 16, 2026
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July 16, 2026, (Inside AI) — Leading artificial intelligence models from labs including Anthropic and OpenAI are significantly less likely to criticize governments with repressive free speech records, according to a new study by Meta's Oversight Board released Thursday.

The research marks the board's first large language model (LLM) analysis. It found that AI services often mirror the restrictive rules of certain countries, potentially embedding bias into tools used by a growing global audience.

The board, funded by Meta but operating independently, tested 10 models across 10 jurisdictions. These included systems from Meta Platforms, Google, and China's DeepSeek. Jurisdictions were classified as "permissive" or "restrictive" using Freedom House rankings.

In "restrictive" jurisdictions—such as China and Saudi Arabia, where laws penalize political criticism—models refused 34% of requests for politically critical content. In "permissive" regions, the refusal rate was just 14%.

The board noted a troubling discovery: models sometimes cited explicit rules that appeared nonexistent and were inconsistently applied.

"We also saw evidence of models explaining that they were following explicit rules that, as far as we could tell, did not exist and were not evenly applied," the board stated.

The findings raise urgent questions about how AI systems internalize local legal threats, often over-censoring to avoid risk. This "chilling effect" can distort outputs even when no direct legal obligation exists, effectively outsourcing censorship to machines.

The study underscores a broader industry tension. On Tuesday, Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis called for a U.S.-led AI watchdog to screen advanced models globally before deployment. His proposal echoes growing demands for pre-release safety evaluations, but the Oversight Board's findings suggest that even post-deployment, models adapt to local political climates in opaque ways.

Critics argue that AI firms have long prioritized market access over human rights. Similar patterns emerged in earlier research: a 2023 study by Citizen Lab found that chatbots in China avoided topics like Tiananmen Square, while a 2024 report from AlgorithmWatch showed European AI tools self-censoring on migration issues. The Oversight Board's study now quantifies this behavior across multiple labs and jurisdictions, adding empirical weight to long-held concerns.

The board urged AI companies to conduct systematic human rights analyses and demanded greater transparency in training and evaluation processes. Yet, the path forward remains murky. While the EU's AI Act mandates risk assessments for high-risk systems, enforcement is nascent. In the U.S., sector-specific rules are fragmented, leaving a vacuum that companies fill with inconsistent internal policies.

Some experts advocate for "constitutional AI" approaches, where models are trained on explicit human rights principles. Others propose mandatory disclosure of training data sources and refusal logs. The Oversight Board's study, available on its website, provides a baseline for such reforms but also highlights the scale of the challenge: even well-intentioned safety measures can be co-opted by authoritarian legal frameworks.

The research arrives as AI adoption accelerates in sensitive sectors like journalism, law, and civic technology. If models silently align with the most restrictive norms, the democratic promise of AI risks being undermined from within.

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