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Wyoming committee weighs state approaches to AI governance, MRO certification and risks from autonomous agents
Summary
The Select Committee reviewed other states' AI laws, heard a model for a multi‑stakeholder regulatory organization (California SB 813), and received expert testimony on autonomous AI agents, safety, provenance and economic impacts. Members asked staff to share the California bill and to continue studying 'human‑in‑the‑loop' and liability options.
The Select Committee on Blockchain, Financial Technology and Digital Innovation Technology met May 20 in Jackson to review state approaches to artificial intelligence governance and to begin a discussion of liability, transparency and autonomous AI agents.
Clarissa Nord, attorney with the Legislative Service Office, told the committee that "AI systems are machine based technologies that generate predictions, decisions, or outputs that can affect real or virtual environments," and summarized recent state activity. She told members that California, Colorado and Utah each adopted different AI frameworks in the prior year — California focusing on transparency for generative AI (including requirements to disclose training datasets by 2026), Colorado concentrating on so‑called "high risk" systems in areas such as employment and housing, and Utah creating an AI learning lab and…
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