Trump Signs Order Seeking to Limit State-Level AI Regulation

Trump Signs Order Seeking to Limit State-Level AI Regulation

Trump Signs Order Seeking to Limit State-Level AI Regulation

<p>Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg</p>

Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg

President Donald Trump signed an order aimed at thwarting state-level regulation of artificial intelligence through lawsuits and funding cuts, handing a win to tech industry leaders who’ve pressed for preemption of local rules.

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Trump said the measure was necessary to bolster the emerging technology and counter a patchwork of state-level rules the industry worries will hamper its growth.

“You have to have a central source of approval when they need approval. So things have to come to one source. They can’t go to California, New York and various other places,” Trump said Thursday during an event in the Oval Office.

To that end, the order directs the US attorney general to establish an “AI Litigation Task Force” with the responsibility of challenging state AI laws that are “inconsistent” with that policy.

It also directs the secretary of Commerce — within 90 days — to consult with other officials and “publish an evaluation of existing State AI laws that identifies onerous laws that conflict with the policy.” The Commerce secretary must also issue a notice specifying the conditions under which states may remain eligible for funding through the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program.

Executive departments will be allowed to assess discretionary grant programs in consultation with Trump’s special adviser for AI and crypto to determine whether agencies may condition such grants on states not enacting AI laws that conflict with the president’s goals.

Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg
Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg

Championed by White House AI czar David Sacks, the directive culminates months of lobbying by AI companies led by OpenAI and Alphabet Inc.’s Google as well as venture capital giant Andreessen Horowitz. Executives including Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang have warned that state laws popping up across the country risk overwhelming a nascent industry and potentially harming US competitiveness with China in AI.

Trump said he had consulted with numerous tech industry leaders on the order and indicated Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook, who has been visiting Washington this week, was among them.

“They won’t be able to do this. This will not be successful unless they have one source of approval or disapproval. Frankly, you can have disapproval too, but it’s one source. They can’t go to 50 different sources,” Trump said.

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