DENVER (AP) — Artificial intelligence is helping decide which Americans get the job interview, the apartment, even medical care, but the first major proposals to reign in bias in AI decision making are facing headwinds from every direction.
Lawmakers working on these bills, in states including Colorado, Connecticut and Texas, are coming together Thursday to argue the case for their proposals as civil rights-oriented groups and the industry play tug-of-war with core components of the legislation.
Organizations including labor unions and consumer advocacy groups are pulling for more transparency from companies and greater legal recourse for citizens to sue over AI discrimination. The industry is offering tentative support but digging in its heels over those accountability measures.
The bipartisan lawmakers caught in the middle — including those from Alaska, Georgia and Virginia — have been working on AI legislation together in the face of federal inaction. The goal of the press conference is to highlight their work across states and stakeholders, reinforcing the importance of collaboration and compromise in this first step in regulation.
Zara Tindall and her husband Mike share a loved
How Christopher Nolan couldn't have won his first Oscar without his family's support
The Elle Woods effect: Good looking lawyers have more success in court, study finds
Spotify hikes its prices for millions of UK customers: Premium plans jump by up to 13%
The Chicago Bears are poised to draft Caleb Williams with the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft
I'm from Texas and live in the UK, these are all the weird things I've found about British people
Love Island's Amy Hart reveals cruel trolls target her and one
Moment police arrest teenager Brian Cohee who hid head of homeless man he murdered in closet
Husband of former Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon is arrested again in party finance probe
Woman's rare disease causes 20