Trump releases AI policy to pre-empt state rules


FILE PHOTO: AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters and robot hand are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration created on June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

WASHINGTON, March 20 (Reuters) - The White ⁠House released an artificial intelligence policy on Friday that aims to pre-empt state ⁠rules, ensure protections for children and shield communities from prohibitive energy costs.

The ‌Trump administration has been pushing for a single legislative framework that can be applied uniformly across the country, rather than leaving states to form their own plans.

U.S. President Donald Trump in December said he ​would withhold federal broadband funding from states whose laws ⁠to regulate artificial intelligence are judged ⁠by his administration to be holding back American dominance in the technology.

The AI industry ⁠has ‌been a powerful profit driver for the tech sector in recent years, propelling chipmaker Nvidia to become the world's largest company, while tech behemoths Amazon.com, Meta ⁠Platforms, Alphabet and Microsoft pour billions of dollars into ​the burgeoning sector.

The White ‌House said it looked forward to working with Congress to turn the framework ⁠into legislation.

"We need ​one national AI framework, not a 50-state patchwork,” Michael Kratsios, science and technology adviser to Trump, told The Daily Signal. "And I think one of the key provisions of it that will ⁠make it all work and come together is really ​focusing on the bipartisan consensus around protecting America’s children."

Protections in the White House framework include giving parents control of accounts and devices to protect their children's privacy and suggests ⁠features to combat potential sexual exploitation or self-harm.

The framework calls on Congress to streamline permitting so that electricity-gobbling data centers can generate their own power on site. It wants to increase the federal government's ability to fight AI-generated scams and national security concerns.

The ​plan calls for removing barriers to innovation, accelerating AI deployment ⁠across business sectors and making it easier to build top-grade AI systems, with a goal ​of ensuring global AI dominance.

The framework includes provisions ‌on intellectual property rights, preventing censorship and protecting ​free speech and developing an AI-proficient workforce by educating Americans.

(Reporting by Katharine Jackson and Doina Chiacu; Editing by Katharine Jackson, Chizu Nomiyama and Hugh Lawson)

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