White House AI Policy Framework
Beware the AI Preemption Trap. The White House wants Congress to override state AI laws in favor of a single, lighter federal standard. This Just Security analysis argues the move could shield developers from liability and leave vulnerable populations without meaningful recourse.
Georgetown’s CSET Breaks Down the White House AI Framework. Researchers at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology offer an early read on the new policy framework, covering its national security implications and the tradeoffs between promoting innovation and managing risk.
White House AI Framework Prioritizes Industry Over the People Most at Risk. A critical take arguing the framework’s emphasis on competitiveness and federal preemption comes at the expense of protections for marginalized communities, disabled people, and low-income workers.
America’s AI Governance Vacuum Is Really a Democracy Problem. Laura MacCleery makes the case that the absence of coherent AI oversight isn’t just a regulatory gap. It’s a democratic failure, with key decisions being made by a handful of private actors and executive officials with little public accountability.
Policy & Regulation
Judge Blocks Pentagon from Labeling Anthropic a “Supply Chain Risk”. A federal judge halted the administration’s attempt to ban federal use of Anthropic’s Claude models, ruling it appeared to be retaliation for the company’s insistence on safety guardrails. The case sets a notable precedent at the intersection of AI safety, government procurement, and free speech.
Bipartisan Bill Would Force Transparency on AI Foundation Models. New legislation directs the FTC to set disclosure standards for high-impact AI models, requiring companies to reveal training data sources, methods, and capabilities. The bill targets “black box” systems used in healthcare, lending, and law enforcement.
The Elders: Governments Must Act Now to Manage AI for the Public Good. The group of former world leaders calls for urgent multilateral cooperation on AI governance, warning that the window for shaping AI’s trajectory in the public interest is closing fast.
RAND: How to Mitigate Catastrophic AI Harms When Federal Regulation Isn’t Coming. A Delphi-based expert study finds little appetite in Washington for comprehensive regulation of catastrophic AI risks in the near term. The report suggests states and industry will have to fill the gap through voluntary standards and risk disclosure incentives.
Ethics & Safety
DeepMind Publishes Framework for Detecting AI-Driven Manipulation. New research from Google DeepMind examines how increasingly conversational AI models can be used for psychological manipulation. The team proposes design and policy safeguards to protect users from AI-powered influence campaigns.
The Real Problem with AI in War Goes Far Beyond Anthropic vs. the Pentagon. The Anthropic controversy is a sideshow, argues this piece. The deeper issue is the total absence of binding legal frameworks governing how AI can be used in lethal military decisions.
How AI Hype Obscures the Exploitation of African Data Workers. An investigative piece exposing how the global AI supply chain depends on underpaid African data labelers and content moderators, whose labor is systematically hidden behind narratives of autonomous AI capability.
Wave of Ethics Resignations Points to a Corporate Governance Crisis in AI. High-profile departures from AI ethics and safety teams across major tech companies suggest that internal governance structures are failing to meaningfully constrain development amid competitive and investor pressure.
Resisting Humanization: Why AI Design Choices in Sensitive Contexts Matter. This arXiv preprint argues that anthropomorphic design elements in conversational AI (emotive language, personality modes) can mislead users and erode autonomy, especially in vulnerable settings like support for gender-based violence survivors.
Economics & Employment
ILO and World Bank: Generative AI’s Impact on Jobs Will Be Deeply Uneven. A joint paper finds that lower-income countries and vulnerable workers face disproportionate disruption from generative AI, with inadequate safety nets to absorb the shock. The report calls for targeted policy interventions across regions.
Vanderbilt Law: Congress Should Start Planning for a Potential AI Crash. Trillions in AI infrastructure investment are propping up the U.S. economy, but revenues remain far below investment levels. This report warns the conditions for a serious economic correction are building and urges contingency planning now.
AI Hiring Tools Are Rejecting Graduates Before Any Human Sees Their Resume. Automated screening tools are creating opaque barriers to entry for recent graduates, raising questions about fairness and accountability in AI-driven recruitment.
The Matthew Effect at Scale: AI Lowers Content Costs but Concentrates Influence. Generative AI makes it cheaper than ever to produce professional and academic content, but attention remains scarce. The result: already-prominent voices gain even more disproportionate influence, worsening inequality in knowledge production.
Research
Duke: Building AI Safety Infrastructure in Health Systems. This white paper calls for proactive, lifecycle-based AI risk management in healthcare, emphasizing cross-system learning and vendor collaboration to address bias, errors, and governance gaps that affect patient outcomes.
Diversity Laundering: When AI-Generated Faces Replace Actual Diverse Talent. Brands are using synthetic faces to simulate racial and gender diversity in ad campaigns without hiring diverse workers. The piece examines the ethical cost of swapping representation for simulation.
Last Updated: 2026-03-28 07:45 (California Time)