Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) stated Tuesday {that a} provision searching for to bar states from regulating synthetic intelligence (AI) is “not at all dead,” regardless of being stripped from President Trump’s tax and spending invoice earlier this yr.
“It’s not at all dead,” he advised Politico’s Rachel Bade, including, “In the course of that bill, I was privileged as chairman of the Commerce Committee to write major portions of that bill. And I gotta say, we won virtually every battle. We had about 20 battles, and I think we won 19. So I feel pretty good.”
Cruz pushed to maintain the AI moratorium, which sought to limit states from regulating the expertise for 10 years, in Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.”
Nonetheless, he was in the end among the many 99 senators who voted to strip the measure from the laws after a cope with Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) fell aside. Their short-lived settlement diminished the moratorium to 5 years and featured some exceptions for youths’ on-line security and publicity rights.
Regardless of initially clearing the Home, the availability was additionally going through vocal pushback from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who threatened to withhold her vote for the laws if the AI moratorium remained.
Cruz launched new AI laws final week, often called the SANDBOX Act, which might enable corporations to use for waivers for rules that they argue impede their means to experiment with the expertise.
The invoice comes as a part of a broader AI framework put ahead by the Senate Commerce chair, who argues his proposal may “turbocharge economic activity, cut through bureaucratic red tape, and empower American AI developers while protecting human flourishing.”