Why the AI moratorium's defeat may signal a new political era

MIT Technology Review 

The moratorium could also have killed laws that have already been adopted around the country, including a Colorado law that targets algorithmic discrimination, laws in Utah and California aimed at making AI-generated content more identifiable, and other legislation focused on preserving data privacy and keeping children safe online. Proponents of the moratorium, such OpenAI and Senator Ted Cruz, have said that a "patchwork" of state-level regulations would place an undue burden on technology companies and stymie innovation. Federal regulation, they argue, is a better approach--but there is currently no federal AI regulation in place. Wiener and other state lawmakers can now get back to work writing and passing AI policy, at least for the time being--with the tailwind of a major moral victory at their backs. The movement to defeat the moratorium was impressively bipartisan: 40 state attorneys general signed a letter to Congress opposing the measure, as did a group of over 250 Republican and Democratic state lawmakers.