11 # Stanford University AI policy diff
22 ## Newly extracted tracker claim
33 This claim was newly extracted or newly promoted in the tracker release. It is not necessarily newly published by the university.
4+other: Stanford University Communications says its AI guidelines for marketing and communications complement existing university policy, and if they conflict with the Administrative Guide, the Administrative Guide controls.
5+Evidence (en, feee7b541ca1): These guidelines complement existing university policy. If there is a conflict between this document and a policy in the Administrative Guide, the Administrative Guide controls.
6+Source Last-Modified: 2026-06-02T19:08:52.000Z
47 ## Newly extracted tracker claim
58 This claim was newly extracted or newly promoted in the tracker release. It is not necessarily newly published by the university.
9+other: Stanford University Communications says AI use for marketing and communications should not waive or diminish professional, ethical, or legal obligations, and that applicable laws and Stanford policies continue to apply when AI is used.
10+Evidence (en, feee7b541ca1): Please keep in mind that in general, use of AI should not waive or diminish professional, ethical, or legal obligations (“no AI exceptionalism”)—all applicable laws and Stanford policies continue to apply when AI is used.
11+Source Last-Modified: 2026-06-02T19:08:52.000Z
612 ## Newly extracted tracker claim
713 This claim was newly extracted or newly promoted in the tracker release. It is not necessarily newly published by the university.
14+teaching: Stanford University Communications says its AI guidelines build on the AI at Stanford Advisory Committee view that AI should augment human capabilities rather than replace them.
15+Evidence (en, feee7b541ca1): These guidelines build on direction from the AI at Stanford Advisory Committee, whose report held that AI should be used to augment human capabilities, not replace them.
16+Source Last-Modified: 2026-06-02T19:08:52.000Z