On December 11, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on artificial intelligence (AI) aimed at establishing federal regulatory standards and preventing overlaps from state-issued AI laws.
Speaking to reporters, Trump stated that America needs a central approval authority. He argued that companies would not be able to operate effectively if they had to comply with 50 different laws from all the states simultaneously.
According to White House AI adviser David Sacks, the new executive order will give the federal government a tool to address "overly stringent" state regulations while still respecting regulations related to child protection.
Many major technology companies, such as OpenAI, Google, Meta, and the Andreessen Horowitz Foundation, have long called for the federal government to play a leading role in regulating AI.
Meanwhile, governors from both the Democratic and Republican parties argue that they need to set up their own "safety barriers" because Congress has yet to pass federal AI legislation for many years.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has proposed legislation on AI rights, including data privacy, parental control, and consumer protection.
Meanwhile, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation requiring large-scale AI developers to disclose disaster risk mitigation plans.
Many other states have also enacted regulations banning sensitive images created by AI, as well as preventing the use of deepfake technology (which can create videos with faces and voices that look exactly like real people) for political purposes.
Source: https://www.vietnamplus.vn/tong-thong-my-ky-sac-lenh-thiet-lap-tieu-chuan-quoc-gia-ve-luat-ai-post1082649.vnp






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