Committee advances bill to define artificial intelligence in state law
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The Technology Committee advanced Senate Bill 2437, a bill to establish a baseline statutory definition of artificial intelligence recommended by the Artificial Intelligence Regulatory Task Force (AIR); the measure passed the committee by voice vote and will be reported out for further consideration.
The Technology Committee advanced Senate Bill 2437, a bill to define "artificial intelligence" in state law, at its meeting. Chair (S1) said the bill came as a recommendation from the Artificial Intelligence Regulatory Task Force (AIR) and is intended to establish a baseline definition that conforms to federal language to aid future regulation.
"The only purpose of this bill is to establish a definition for artificial intelligence, what it is or isn't," the chair said during the committee presentation. Committee members raised no substantive questions during the discussion.
A committee member moved that the bill be passed; the committee approved the motion by voice vote and the bill was carried and will be reported out. The committee did not record a roll-call tally in the transcript.
Why it matters: Committee members framed the measure as a housekeeping step to create a common reference for the many forthcoming AI-related bills. Establishing a statutory definition is intended to reduce ambiguity as lawmakers consider regulation in later sessions.
The committee did not take additional action on enforcement or regulatory mechanisms as part of this bill; it was presented as a definitional baseline only.
The committee adjourned its consideration of SB 2437 after the voice vote; the bill will move forward in the legislative process.
