The USMCA contains a new (when compared to NAFTA) chaper on Digital Trade. This addresses barrier free trade in respect of digital products (basically products that can be transmitted electronically) including by exempting them from duties and requiring no less favourable (they spell it without the "u" in the text but being up here in Canada… Continue reading USMCA impact on AI regulation.
Author: Chris Alam
California seals it.
California has signed a bill into law (see what I did with the headline and the photo?) that makes it "unlawful for any person to use a bot to communicate or interact with another person in California online, with the intent to mislead the other person about its artificial identity for the purpose of knowingly deceiving… Continue reading California seals it.
Indian data legislation.
From India comes an interesting proposed bill on protection of data. If the Ganges is the lifeblood of India, then data is the lifeblood of AI. And so legislation on data becomes an important part of AI regulation. Some interesting things about this bill: the data covered has to be in respect of a person who is… Continue reading Indian data legislation.
Get things right, mostly.
This article about AI and the philosophies behind adopting it can also apply to how we think about regulation of AI. Making a sausage may not be the prettiest thing in the world and maybe regulators aren't going to be the best sausage makers the first time out (how long can I drag this metaphor… Continue reading Get things right, mostly.
Horror vacui.
And so do people who want to get on with things. We haven't seen a lot of active legislative or governance effort on the AI regulation front despite a lot of papers and high level thought around it. Predictably then, people who want to get on with things, get on with things. In the linked paper… Continue reading Horror vacui.
