Section 2 of Trumpâs order is written vaguely to give the administration leeway to challenge many types of AI laws. âIt is the policy of the United States to sustain and enhance the United Statesâ global AI dominance through a minimally burdensome national policy framework for AI,â the section says. Colorado law irks Trump The executive order specifically names a Colorado law that requires AI developers to protect consumers against âalgorithmic discrimination.â It defines this type of discrimination as âany condition in which the use of an artificial intelligence system results in an unlawful differential treatment or impact that disfavors an individual or group of individuals on the basisâ of age, race, sex, and other protected characteristics. The Colorado law compels developers of âhigh-risk systemsâ to make various disclosures, implement a risk management policy and program, give consumers the right to âcorrect any incorrect personal data that a high-risk system processed in making a consequential decision,â and let consumers appeal any âadverse consequential decision concerning the consumer arising from the deployment of a high-risk system.â Trumpâs order alleges that the Colorado law âmay even force AI models to produce false results in order to avoid a âdifferential treatment or impactâ on protected groups.â Trumpâs order also says that âstate laws sometimes impermissibly regulate beyond State borders, impinging on interstate commerce.â Trump ordered the Commerce Department to evaluate existing state AI laws and identify âonerousâ ones that conflict with the policy. âThat evaluation of State AI laws shall, at a minimum, identify laws that require AI models to alter their truthful outputs, or that may compel AI developers or deployers to disclose or report information in a manner that would violate the First Amendment or any other provision of the Constitution,â the order said.
First seen: 2025-12-12 18:47
Last seen: 2025-12-13 18:52