President Donald Trump issued an executive order Thursday intended to override and block state regulations on artificial intelligence.The order would provide a boost to the AI industry, as many of the leaders of the industry have been wanting a national law to roll back state regulations governing the technology, according to Politico.
“We want to have one central source of approval,” Trump said before signing the order. “And we have, I think, great Republican support. I think we probably have Democrat support, too, because it’s common sense.”
Trump signed the order alongside Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, White House AI czar David Sacks, senior AI policy advisor Sriram Krishnan, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and others.
The full text mirrors a draft version of the executive order that leaked in November. The order creates a litigation task force run by the Justice Department that will decide which state AI laws are worth challenging.
Congress has proven to be an obstacle to achieving President Trump’s goal.
Many in the tech industry support a single federal AI standard as opposed to a patchwork of state AI laws they find overly burdensome. One perplexing issue is protecting children from a variety of potential threats posed by AI. Advocates for kids’ safety are divided on whether trading away state AI rules for online protections for children is something they can live with.
Trending
- Trump shares post opposing Netflix takeover of Warner Bros
- Greg Gutfeld Offers a Reality Check to Left Wing Protesters: ‘You Are Living a Lie’ (VIDEO)
- Judge Says Trump Admin Illegally Cut Billions in Grants From Blue States’ Climate Projects
- Team USA Bobsledder Kris Horn Forced To Take Terrifying Solo Ride After Teammates Miss Sled: WATCH
- At Least 25 States To Be Impacted By Winter Storm Threatening Heavy Snow
- Trump Imposes 25% Tariff On Any Country Doing Business With Iran “Effective Immediately”
- The Same Leftists Outraged Over Renee Good, Didn’t Care About Justine Damond
- DHS Launches New Office for Drone and Counter-Drone Technologies Ahead of World Cup