House Republicans tucked the measure into a section ordering the Commerce Department to deploy funds to “modernize and secure Federal information technology systems through the deployment of commercial artificial intelligence.” The measure has remained largely unchanged since its consideration by the House Energy and Commerce Committee earlier this month, though lawmakers on the House Committee on Rules recently added an exemption so that the moratorium would not apply to the enforcement of any law that “carries a criminal penalty.”

Widely rejected by Democrats, the push is also facing opposition from some Senate Republicans, who would largely need to unite on the legislation to get it passed. At a Senate hearing Wednesday, Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) poured cold water on the idea, expressing concern that the bill would override legislation to protect artists from deepfakes in her state.

“Speaking to the states and their actions, I do want to mention that Tennessee passed the ELVIS Act, which is like our first generation of the NO FAKES Act,” said Blackburn, “And we certainly know that, in Tennessee, we need those protections, and until we pass something that is federally preemptive, we can’t call for a moratorium on those things.”

    • Basic Glitch@lemm.eeOP
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      9 days ago

      It’s like a fucked up doctor Seus rhyme

      States rights for me, and none for you, not if blue states might get them too

      But if we all think about it you will see

      On banning state regulations, we can’t agree

      They say the only regulation needed is a federal light touch

      Because these stupid assholes spent way too much.

      They put all our eggs into one AI basket

      Why trust them now that the economy is in a casket?

      Our economy is fucked either way

      But handing over our rights won’t make it magically ok

      They’ll have to figure it out, like we do with tariffs and inflation

      Tell them to eat our AI regulations