Connecticut's proposed bill on AI is dead after Gov. Ned Lamont said he would veto it if...| CT Insider
Keypoint: Colorado policymakers outlined their privacy and AI priorities at a recent Husch Blackwell event. In early March, Husch Blackwell hosted a| Byte Back
The working group held its first meeting on Sept. 14, which included an overview of AI, generative AI, and AI use cases, according to an emailed invitation shared with Pluribus News by Connecticut Sen. James Maroney (D), who is spearheading the effort. Maroney said the plan is for the working group to gather virtually every other week for at least another four or five meetings to hear from experts and review existing AI regulatory frameworks.| Pluribus News
Connecticut lawmakers will consider a new artificial intelligence measure this term, crafted by a state legislator who’s part of a national movement seeking to regulate without stifling the emerging technology.| news.bloomberglaw.com
The act alters the name, membership, and issues of study of the task force for the consideration of facial recognition services to establish the artificial intelligence impact task force (task force). The membership of the task force includes 26 members who, on or before August 1, 2024, will be appointed by the governor, the president of the senate, the minority leader of the senate, the speaker of the house of representatives, and the minority leader of the house of representatives. Members ...| leg.colorado.gov
On and after February 1, 2026, the act requires a developer of a high-risk artificial intelligence system (high-risk system) to use reasonable care to protect consumers from any known or reasonably foreseeable risks of algorithmic discrimination in the high-risk system. There is a rebuttable presumption that a developer used reasonable care if the developer complied with specified provisions in the act, including:| leg.colorado.gov