A few days ago I wrote a shortform wondering if anyone had done a breakdown of the different state-level AI bills that had been proposed.
People seemed interested, and so I ended up doing the analysis and writing up my findings. This is the beginning of the piece, which is posted on my Substack:
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People keep saying that US states have proposed 1,000+ AI-related bills this year.
This statistic has been at the center of a major Congressional fight in the “Big Beautiful Bill”: whether to strip individual states of their ability to regulate AI, via a 10-year moratorium on state AI regulation.
Here’s the issue: The claim about the supposed 1,000+ state AI bills doesn’t hold up to analysis, nor does the implication that the bills would hobble innovation.
I dug into the supposed “1,000+” state AI bills directly, as well as reviewed third-party analysis. Here’s what I found:
All things considered, what’s the right headline figure? For frontier AI development, I would be surprised if more than 40 or so proposed state AI bills matter in a given year, the vast majority of which won’t become actual law. If these laws would in fact contradict each other, I would like for critics to note these contradictions more directly, rather than implying it via the alleged number of proposed bills.
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Analysis continues, with many examples, here.