The Colorado Sun: Two years of intense debate in Colorado over how artificial intelligence should be regulated ended with little fanfare early Tuesday when the legislature passed a compromise measure watering down — and once again delaying — the state’s first-in-the-nation law imposing rules on the technology.
Instead of requiring companies, governments and other groups that create and use artificial intelligence to disclose how their AI systems help make decisions on things like hiring, loans and housing, they would just have to notify consumers when the technology is being used to make such consequential decisions. They would also have to give consumers an opportunity to appeal.
The measure, Senate Bill 189, also makes a big change by pushing back the start date of the law regulating AI to January 2027 from June. That law was passed two years ago and has yet to go into effect.
Visit The Colorado Sun for more.