TikTok has announced an additional $200,000 investment in advertising credits to support artificial intelligence media literacy initiatives across Sub-Saharan Africa.
The announcement was made on Tuesday in Nairobi, Kenya, during the third annual Sub-Saharan Africa Safer Internet Summit, according to a statement by Tokunbo Ibrahim, Head of Government Relations and Public Policy for Sub-Saharan Africa at TikTok.
The initiative aims to support local organisations working to expand public understanding of artificial intelligence and strengthen media literacy across the region as AI tools become more widely used.
Ibrahim said the additional investment reflects TikTok’s commitment to educating its online community on how to responsibly interact with artificial intelligence technologies.
“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 as viewers or creators,” he said.
He explained that the summit also focused on the platform’s trust and safety initiatives, including protecting young people online and developing policy frameworks for responsible AI governance.
According to him, the newly announced funding will support organisations across Sub-Saharan Africa that are working to promote AI literacy and digital awareness.
The $200,000 ad credit investment builds on TikTok’s broader $2 million AI Literacy Fund launched in November 2025 to improve public understanding of artificial intelligence and address emerging risks such as misinformation and deepfakes.
Three organisations in the region have already benefited from the initiative.
Africa Check is expanding its fact-checking operations across Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya to help audiences identify AI-generated misinformation and deepfakes.
Mtoto News in Kenya is producing educational content designed to help young people understand and responsibly engage with AI technology.
Meanwhile, the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID) is strengthening media capacity through its independent fact-checking platform DUBAWA to combat information disorder.
Speaking on the initiative, Valiant Richey, Global Head of Partnerships, Elections and Market Integrity at TikTok, said the company is working with trusted local organisations to ensure AI literacy programmes have a stronger impact.
“We are partnering with trusted local organisations that communities already know and rely on, because their expertise and deep local connections are essential to making AI literacy programmes truly impactful,” he said.
Richey added that TikTok is also investing in technologies that promote transparency around AI-generated content, including tools that require creators to label realistic AI-generated material.
He noted that the platform also deploys advanced detection technology and works with initiatives such as the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity to help users identify manipulated content online.
TikTok’s AI literacy initiative is part of a broader effort by the company to improve public understanding of artificial intelligence and promote responsible digital behaviour as AI-powered tools become increasingly embedded in social media platforms.
The platform also actively enforces its community guidelines through a mix of automated detection systems and human moderation teams to limit the spread of harmful or misleading content.
In March 2025, reported that TikTok removed 2.4 million videos posted by Nigerian users in the fourth quarter of 2024 for violating its content policies.
