A GOP revolt over AI is taking shape
“The Republican Party has a choice to make — perhaps the defining choice of its next half century,” Sen. Josh Hawley wrote in an essay on AI.
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
The full corpus — beyond today's front page.
411 results · page 9 of 18
“The Republican Party has a choice to make — perhaps the defining choice of its next half century,” Sen. Josh Hawley wrote in an essay on AI.
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
“The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance,” Anthropic said in a statement Friday evening.
Who should care: Lawyers · Compliance · General readers · AI governance · Policy
The White House’s shambolic AI policy Marcus on AI | Substack
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
California State Bar's proposed AI ethics rules put attorneys on notice Daily Journal
Who should care: Lawyers · Compliance · General readers · AI governance · Policy
The European Data Protection Board is hosting a July conference examining the growing use of AI tools in hiring and recruitment, with a focus on the data protection implications these systems raise for job applicants and employers alike.
Why this matters: Algorithmic hiring systems can collect and process extensive personal data with limited transparency, leaving candidates with little visibility into how automated decisions affect them — raising real concerns about profiling, bias, and meaningful consent in high-stakes employment contexts.
Who should care: Lawyers · Privacy officers · AI governance · Administrators · Compliance · General readers · Policy
Why Librarians Belong in the AI Governance Conversation Texas State Library and Archives (.gov)
Who should care: AI governance · Lawyers · Administrators · General readers · Policy
Brussels, 12 June – As of today, coordinated supervision of the European Union’s asylum and migration database (Eurodac) will be carried out by the Coordinated Supervision Committee (CSC). Eurodac is an information system initially designed to compare the fingerprints of asylum applicants and irregular migrants, which has evolved into a full asylum and migration management system. It plays a key role in implementing the Dublin III Regulation, which aims at determining the Member State responsible for examining an asylum application. Operational since 15 January 2003, this system is currently…
Who should care: Lawyers · Compliance
A man has filed a lawsuit against law enforcement agencies after allegedly being wrongfully arrested due to an error made by an AI system, raising questions about accountability when automated tools drive detention decisions.
Why this matters: The case highlights how AI-driven policing can strip individuals of liberty based on algorithmic mistakes, with little immediate recourse — underscoring due-process gaps when government agencies delegate arrest decisions to opaque, fallible automated systems.
Who should care: Lawyers · Privacy officers · Compliance · General readers · AI governance · Policy
WJC Joins UN Interfaith Dialogue on AI Ethics and Global Security in Geneva World Jewish Congress
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
MSSP Market News: Could AI governance be MSSPs’ next revenue stream? MSSP Alert
Who should care: AI governance · Lawyers · Administrators · General readers · Policy
AI Regulation and the Looming Problem of the Takings Clause Lawfare
Who should care: Lawyers · Compliance · General readers · AI governance · Policy
A Fort Myers man has filed a lawsuit against Jacksonville Beach police and the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office, alleging he was wrongfully arrested after AI-powered facial recognition technology misidentified him as a suspect.
Why this matters: The case highlights how facial recognition errors can strip individuals of liberty without reliable evidence — raising urgent Fourth Amendment and due-process concerns about law enforcement's growing reliance on algorithmic identification tools that carry documented misidentification risks.
Who should care: Lawyers · Privacy officers · Compliance · Cybersecurity · General readers · AI governance · Policy
A man has filed a lawsuit against law enforcement, claiming that an AI-powered facial recognition system produced a faulty match that resulted in his wrongful arrest. The case adds to a growing body of legal challenges targeting the accuracy and use of facial recognition tools by police.
Why this matters: Wrongful arrests driven by algorithmic misidentification illustrate the concrete civil-liberties stakes of deploying error-prone biometric surveillance — particularly for individuals who bear the cost of a technology's failure with little recourse before serious harm occurs.
Who should care: Lawyers · Privacy officers · Compliance · Cybersecurity · General readers · AI governance · Policy
A view from DC: The plan to trade kids' safety rules for AI preemption IAPP
Who should care: Lawyers · Compliance · General readers · AI governance · Policy
WJ Talk: Maritime companies should apply ‘bridge discipline’ to AI governance, attorney says The Waterways Journal
Who should care: AI governance · Lawyers · Administrators · General readers · Policy
How a facial recognition match led to a Florida man’s wrongful arrest Straight Arrow News - SAN - Unbiased. Straight Facts.
Who should care: Privacy officers · Cybersecurity · General readers · Policy
California’s current and future leaders are faced with a policy dilemma when it comes to the specter of Ai-driven job displacement.
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
Google DeepMind is funding research into the potential dangers of situations where millions of different AI agents interact with each other online. According to Rohin Shah, who directs the company’s AGI safety and alignment research, the mass-market arrival of agents that can carry out tasks without human oversight and follow instructions given to them by other…
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
Separate meetings this week with children's advocates and the tech industry came just days after a bipartisan House proposal on AI got a chilly reception.
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
Think your smart toaster is just making toast? Think again. Information Commissioner's Office
AI in the Workplace: Employment Law & Data Privacy Risks Employers Face JD Supra
Who should care: General readers · AI governance · Policy
A Fort Myers man has filed a lawsuit against Jacksonville Beach police alleging he was wrongfully arrested based on a facial recognition match, adding to a growing number of cases where the technology has been linked to mistaken identifications and wrongful detentions.
Why this matters: The case highlights how facial recognition errors can deprive individuals of liberty without reliable evidence, raising Fourth Amendment concerns about probable cause when law enforcement acts on algorithmically generated — and potentially flawed — suspect matches.
Who should care: Lawyers · Privacy officers · Compliance · Cybersecurity · General readers · Policy
Police to deploy facial recognition cameras again in Peterborough BBC
Who should care: Privacy officers · Cybersecurity · General readers · Policy
A Bruegel analysis examines shortcomings in the EU's AI Act and proposes adjustments to better calibrate its regulatory framework, suggesting the current rules may be misaligned in ways that affect both innovation and rights protection.
Why this matters: How the EU tunes its AI rules has direct consequences for individuals: overly lax standards can enable unchecked automated surveillance and profiling, while poorly designed restrictions may push high-risk systems into less-regulated jurisdictions where civil liberties protections are weaker.
Who should care: AI governance · Lawyers · Administrators · Compliance · General readers · Policy