Republican lawmakers are advancing a budget reconciliation bill in the House to stop states from enacting or enforcing AI-related regulations for 10 years. The measure, embedded in a budget bill, would bar states from passing restrictions on a broad array of automated computing systems, potentially impacting everything from generative AI chatbots to risk-assessment tools in criminal justice. Critics, including Democrats and advocacy groups, argue this is a significant gift to Big Tech, potentially undermining ongoing state efforts to manage AI risks such as deepfakes, algorithmic bias, and data privacy. They warn it may lead to unchecked innovation with societal harms, as happened with the lack of early social media regulation. The bill faces procedural hurdles in the Senate, but if passed, it could invalidate over 500 proposed state-level AI laws and stall further state innovation in AI oversight for a decade.
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