AI, Trump
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The White House is laying out a new framework that it wants Congress to use to shape national rules for artificial intelligence without curbing growth in the sector.
The White House released its policy recommendations for AI on Friday, stating its framework “can succeed only” without a patchwork of conflicting state laws on the emerging technology. The blueprint for Congress is split into seven priorities,
The White House on Friday released its long-awaited national artificial intelligence legislative framework, a move to prevent states from enacting their own laws and enforce the Trump administration’s light-touch approach to AI regulation.
The framework must now be turned into legislation and wind its way through the meat grinder of lawmakers and lobbyists who weren’t involved in the task force’s deliberations.
Regulations on artificial intelligence data centers failed to make it across the finish line. The Assembly passed a Republican-backed bill in January, but no proposal made it to the Senate floor for a vote on Tuesday.
The White House released a sweeping framework urging Congress to adopt a federal law that limits state regulation but makes the U.S. more competitive with other countries.
Artificial intelligence is swiftly evolving, forcing regulators to figure out how to oversee a technology that can act autonomously and potentially improve itself, experts said at the HIMSS
Senators voted on a bipartisan basis to nudge forward legislation that seeks to install some of the first legal guardrails for artificial intelligence technology in Massachusetts.
Connecticut legislators are working through a package of bills to establish a policy framework that regulates artificial intelligence.
The White House introduced a national framework for artificial intelligence regulation, focusing on protections for children, communities, and small businesses. It seeks a unified legislative approach,