AI legislation drawing opposition because of its private right of action and potential conflicts with federal privacy law passed a New Mexico House committee Thursday.
Plaintiff Alessandro De La Torre dropped a class-action complaint against LinkedIn that alleged the company used subscriber data to train its generative AI without consent.
A South Carolina House Judiciary subcommittee heard some debate but didn't get to a vote on a bill regulating social media for minors on Wednesday.
While many believe that privacy laws can serve as a basis for AI regulation, AI may actually help determine privacy rules instead, said privacy professionals on a webinar hosted by George Washington University Law School Professor Daniel Solove on Wednesday.
Assessments around AI should be done altogether and not split into separate categories of risk, privacy, cybersecurity or other issues, said chief privacy officers at an International Association of Privacy Professionals webinar Tuesday.
Microsoft is trying to implement compliance systems that put the company in good standing with privacy and AI regulations across countries and jurisdictions, Chief Privacy Officer Julie Brill said Tuesday during an International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) livestream.
The Catalan (Spain) Data Protection Authority Tuesday published its methodology for fundamental rights impact assessments. It aims to give AI providers and deployers an "effective tool to develop trustworthy and human-centered AI solutions," the watchdog said.
Congress should pass a federal privacy law, which would benefit startup compliance and the application of AI throughout the economy, industry groups from several sectors wrote the Senate Commerce and House Commerce committees Tuesday.
New York Assemblymember Clyde Vanel (D) wants an AI bill of rights, among other measures, to regulate the fast-growing technology and its use of personal data. The legislator introduced a raft of bills Tuesday amid great interest across the states in regulating AI (see 2501270051).
Washington state's House Technology Committee on Tuesday cleared a bill on AI transparency out of committee with a do pass recommendation. The panel voted 8-5 for HB-1168 with one of three amendments offered at an executive session Tuesday. The bill requires developers of generative AI systems to post information about how the systems were trained.