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Trump releases AI policy to pre-empt state rules

AI letters and robot hand are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration. — Reuters
AI letters and robot hand are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration. — Reuters
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WASHINGTON: ​The White House released ​a framework on artificial intelligence on Friday that aims to ensure protections for children, communities and small businesses as part of a national plan to regulate developments in the field.


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.


US 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 administration looks forward to working with Congress in the coming months to turn this framework into legislation that the president can sign", the White House said in ‌a statement.


The framework calls on Congress to streamline ​permitting so electricity-gobbling data centres 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.


Protections for children include giving parents controls of accounts and devices to protect ​their children's privacy and supports features to combat ​potential exploitation or self-harm. — Reuters


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