Temporary Door Locking Devices
Requires developers and deployers of high-risk AI to prevent discrimination, disclose risks, conduct impact assessments, and allow enforcement by the state.
Requires developers and deployers of high-risk AI to prevent discrimination, disclose risks, conduct impact assessments, and allow enforcement by the state.
Status: Hearing scheduled Feb 27 at 1:00 p.m. | Introduced: Jan 2025
Primary focus: impose duties on developers and deployers of “high‑risk” AI to prevent algorithmic discrimination, require disclosures and risk management, and authorize enforcement by the Attorney General.
To reduce unlawful “algorithmic discrimination” by requiring reasonable care, transparency, impact assessment, and risk‑management practices for AI systems that autonomously make or substantially contribute to consequential decisions affecting consumers.
Developer obligations (effective Feb 1, 2026)
- Must use reasonable care to prevent known or reasonably foreseeable algorithmic discrimination.
- May not provide a high‑risk AI to a deployer unless accompanied by disclosures about intended use, known limitations, and documentation necessary to conduct an impact assessment.
- Must update disclosures after any intentional, substantial modification.
- Generative AI producing synthetic content must mark outputs in detectable ways (subject to practicability and trade‑secret limits).
Deployer obligations (effective Feb 1, 2026)
- Design, implement, and maintain a documented risk‑management policy/program addressing algorithmic discrimination.
- Complete an impact assessment before initial deployment and prior to significant updates (a new assessment at least 90 days before major updates).
- Notify consumers when a high‑risk AI will be used to make consequential decisions and, if a decision is adverse, provide plain‑language information including opportunities to correct data and appeal with human review.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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