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States Continue to Target AI-Driven Rental Pricing Nineteen states are considering bills that would limit the use of third-party software relying on competitor data to set rental housing prices, according...
Trump, Congress Weigh Measures to Preempt State AI Laws The Trump administration circulated—and then put on hold—a draft executive order aimed at preempting state laws regulating artificial...
Last year, after Colorado and California became the first states in the nation to expand privacy protections to include neural data, we said more states could follow suit . This year two more have done...
MI Lawmakers Advance Medical Debt Protections The Michigan Senate’s Health Policy Committee has advanced a trio of bipartisan bills aimed at reducing the burden of medical costs on residents of...
EU Reversing Course on Tech Regulation After aggressively regulating the technology industry for over a decade, the European Union is moving to loosen its landmark digital privacy and artificial intelligence...
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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed first-in-the-nation legislation (SB 7694) prohibiting social media platforms from providing algorithmic feeds to minors to try to keep them online. But the “Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) for Kids Act” is likely to be challenged by tech companies. Hochul also signed a bill (SB 7695) prohibiting digital services from collecting the data of minors without consent. (NEW YORK POST, LEXISNEXIS STATE NET)
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) announced last week he plans to work with the Legislature to restrict students’ use of smartphones during the school day. The news came just a day after U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy urged Congress to require warning labels for social media platforms indicating they pose mental health risks for young people. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
—Compiled by SNCJ Managing Editor KOREY CLARK
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