Tougher AI customer service rules in Asia Pacific by 2026: Twilio

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA — Companies in the Asia-Pacific region may face tighter rules on AI-driven customer service by 2026, as regulators and consumers demand greater transparency, trust, and seamless handoffs between bots and humans, according to United States-based customer engagement firm Twilio.
In a report from eCommerceNews Australia, the firm predicts that brands will need to rethink their technology and service models to meet rising expectations for clear identification of AI agents and operational visibility.
AI identity rules and customer trust in Asia Pacific
Twilio’s research shows that most consumers still struggle to tell when they are interacting with AI. “90% of consumers failed to correctly identify AI-generated voice clips,” said Nicholas Kontopoulos, Vice President of Marketing, Asia Pacific & Japan at Twilio.
“When the majority of customers cannot distinguish who they are speaking to, regulatory intervention is a certainty,” Kontopoulos warned and described it as an “AI identity crisis.”
To address this, Twilio expects mandatory disclosure of AI agents to become standard across sectors such as finance, retail, telecoms, and government. Consumers will increasingly view clear AI labeling as a right rather than a compliance issue.
Kontopoulos added that operational opacity is another growing concern. Generic updates like “Your case is being reviewed” no longer satisfy users, who now expect detailed, time-stamped insights into service processes.
Twilio also highlights the emergence of the “AI Trust Threshold,” the point at which customers begin to doubt AI’s reliability. Monitoring emotional intensity, hesitation, and sentiment decay will allow firms to route interactions to human agents before frustration escalates, Kontopoulos said.
Strategic friction reassures APAC and Japan consumers
The study notes that not all friction is negative.
“More than half of consumers in Asia Pacific and Japan say they would accept slower service if this improves security or accuracy,” said Christopher Connolly, Director of Solutions Engineering at Twilio.
Brands are expected to introduce “strategic friction” points, such as verification steps, to reassure customers during sensitive transactions.
However, AI-to-human handoffs remain a weak point, with only 14% of agents receiving full context when conversations move from AI, according to Twilio.
“97% of regional consumers value the ability to hand off easily from AI to a human,” the report said.
Investments in orchestration tools and modular AI architectures will help ensure smooth transitions, personalized service, and support for local languages and accents.
For the outsourcing industry, these developments signal a shift in priorities. Contact centers that adopt transparent, trust-aware, and modular AI solutions will be better positioned to meet regulatory demands and exceed customer expectations, turning once-frictional AI handoffs into opportunities to strengthen client relationships and service excellence.

Independent




