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Position: LLM Watermarking Should Align Stakeholders' Incentives for Practical Adoption

2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

2 Pith papers citing it
abstract

Despite progress in watermarking algorithms for large language models (LLMs), real-world deployment remains limited. We argue that this gap stems from misaligned incentives among LLM providers, platforms, and end users, which manifest as three key barriers: competitive risk, detection-tool governance, and attribution issues. We revisit three classes of watermarking through this lens. \emph{Model watermarking} naturally aligns with LLM provider interests, yet faces new challenges in open-source ecosystems. \emph{LLM text watermarking} offers modest provider benefit when framed solely as an anti-misuse tool, but can gain traction in narrowly scoped settings such as dataset de-contamination or user-controlled provenance. \emph{In-context watermarking} (ICW) is tailored for trusted parties, such as conference organizers or educators, who embed hidden watermarking instructions into documents. If a dishonest reviewer or student submits this text to an LLM, the output carries a detectable watermark indicating misuse. This setup aligns incentives: users experience no quality loss, trusted parties gain a detection tool, and LLM providers remain neutral by simply following watermark instructions. We advocate for a broader exploration of incentive-aligned methods, with ICW as an example, in domains where trusted parties need reliable tools to detect misuse. More broadly, we distill design principles for incentive-aligned, domain-specific watermarking and outline future research directions. Our position is that the practical adoption of LLM watermarking requires aligning stakeholder incentives in targeted application domains and fostering active community engagement.

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cs.CR 1 cs.IT 1

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2026 2

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representative citing papers

Watermarking Should Be Treated as a Monitoring Primitive

cs.CR · 2026-05-13 · conditional · novelty 6.0 · 2 refs

Watermarking enables entity-level attribution and monitoring through signal aggregation even in zero-bit designs, creating an unavoidable dual-use tension between attribution and surveillance.

Fundamental Trade-Offs in Multi-Bit Watermarking of Stochastic Processes

cs.IT · 2026-05-09 · unverdicted · novelty 5.0

Derives matched converse and achievability bounds that characterize optimal trade-offs among false-alarm probability, detection error probability, distortion, and information rate for multi-bit watermarking of stationary ergodic stochastic processes.

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Showing 2 of 2 citing papers.

  • Watermarking Should Be Treated as a Monitoring Primitive cs.CR · 2026-05-13 · conditional · none · ref 19 · 2 links · internal anchor

    Watermarking enables entity-level attribution and monitoring through signal aggregation even in zero-bit designs, creating an unavoidable dual-use tension between attribution and surveillance.

  • Fundamental Trade-Offs in Multi-Bit Watermarking of Stochastic Processes cs.IT · 2026-05-09 · unverdicted · none · ref 24 · internal anchor

    Derives matched converse and achievability bounds that characterize optimal trade-offs among false-alarm probability, detection error probability, distortion, and information rate for multi-bit watermarking of stationary ergodic stochastic processes.