Cast your mind back to May of this year: Congress was in the throes of debate
over the massive budget bill. Amidst the many seismic provisions, Senator Ted
Cruz dropped a ticking time bomb of tech policy: a ten-year moratorium on the
ability of states to regulate artificial intelligence. To many, this was
catastrophic. The few massive AI companies seem to be swallowing our economy
whole: their energy demands are overriding household needs, their data demands
are overriding creators’ copyright, and their products are triggering mass
unemployment as well as new types of clinical ...
Tag - laws
On April 14, Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al
Maktoum, announced that the United Arab Emirates would begin using artificial
intelligence to help write its laws. A new Regulatory Intelligence Office would
use the technology to “regularly suggest updates” to the law and “accelerate the
issuance of legislation by up to 70%.” AI would create a “comprehensive
legislative plan” spanning local and federal law and would be connected to
public administration, the courts, and global policy trends.
The plan was widely greeted with astonishment. This sort of AI legislating would
be a global “...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is writing law today. This has required no changes
in legislative procedure or the rules of legislative bodies—all it takes is one
legislator, or legislative assistant, to use generative AI in the process of
drafting a bill.
In fact, the use of AI by legislators is only likely to become more prevalent.
There are currently projects in the US House, US Senate, and legislatures around
the world to trial the use of AI in various ways: searching databases, drafting
text, summarizing meetings, performing policy research and analysis, and more. A
Brazilian municipality ...