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South Africa’s AI Policy Fiasco

South Africa Pulls Its National AI Policy After Discovering It Was Full of AI-Hallucinated Citations. The country’s Department of Communications withdrew its flagship Draft National AI Policy after an internal review found the document contained fabricated references that no one checked before Cabinet approval. Minister Solly Malatsi called it a fundamental breach of institutional credibility, not a mere technical glitch.

The Cautionary Tale for Every Government Quietly Using AI to Draft Policy. TechLabari contextualizes the South African debacle within the continent’s broader AI governance push, arguing the incident exposes a dangerous gap between AI governance ambition and the institutional capacity to actually verify AI-generated work product.

U.S. AI Legislation: States Fill the Federal Void

Trump Administration Misses Key AI Regulatory Deadlines, Leaving States to Act. Key April 2026 federal deadlines tied to AI oversight and preemption of state laws were missed, deepening fragmentation in U.S. AI governance. The gap is creating real uncertainty for companies trying to figure out which rules apply where.

A Flood of State AI Bills: Connecticut, California, Colorado, and Florida All Move Forward. Connecticut passed a 71-page bill covering companion chatbots and AI in hiring. California advanced at least nine AI bills out of committee in a single week, covering everything from children’s safety to employment decisions to content provenance.

State AI Hiring Regulations Are Filling the Gap Left by Federal Retreat. Reed Smith analyzes how New Jersey’s new algorithmic discrimination rules and Illinois’s AI amendment to its Human Rights Act are creating real liability for employers using AI recruiting tools. The federal government’s deprioritization of disparate impact enforcement is accelerating this state-level patchwork.

Policy & Regulation

Japan’s Draft AI Copyright Code Asks the Technically Impossible. The Center for Data Innovation argues Japan’s near-final AI training-data disclosure rules rest on requirements that frontier models simply cannot satisfy, like tracing whether a specific output derives from a specific training input. This puts Japan at odds with the U.S. approach right as both countries are trying to deepen economic ties.

AI Policy Is Built for Oversight, Not Crisis. That Needs to Change. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists argues that current AI regulations like the EU AI Act focus on reporting and documentation rather than rapid response to catastrophic scenarios. The piece calls for pre-negotiated international frameworks modeled on nuclear and pandemic governance.

UK Regulators Quietly Signal Crackdown on Agentic AI. Legal analysis of the UK Digital Regulation Cooperation Forum’s foresight paper, which documented AI agents spontaneously fixing prices, stealing credentials, and hiding messages in ordinary text during simulations. The diplomatic framing obscures a clear regulatory direction from the CMA, FCA, ICO, and Ofcom.

Atlantic Council: Navigating the EU’s AI Regulatory Landscape. This policy brief explores how the EU AI Act is shaping global norms, with emphasis on sovereignty, cross-border data governance, and the geopolitical implications of Europe’s bid for regulatory leadership as the August 2026 enforcement date approaches.

Why OpenAI Cannot Write the Social Contract. A detailed critique of OpenAI’s “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age” document, arguing that while the proposals (public wealth fund, robot taxes, auto-triggering safety nets) are substantively serious, the structural problem is that capital is drafting the terms before labor or civil society has organized a response.

Ethics, Safety & Alignment

AI Doom Warnings Are Getting Louder. Are They Realistic?. Nature examines escalating researcher warnings about existential risks from AI misalignment and superintelligence, weighing their plausibility while noting that overemphasis on far-future scenarios could distract from immediate harms like misinformation and unregulated AI arms races between governments.

Anthropic Finds That Teams of AI Agents Are More Capable but Less Aligned. New alignment research shows that groups of AI agents outperform individual agents on business tasks but amplify misalignment risks, prioritizing effectiveness over ethics. The implication: multi-agent deployments need specialized safety testing that goes well beyond single-agent evaluations.

LLMs Treat Public Comments Differently Based on the Commenter’s Occupation. Across 106,000+ summaries from eight LLMs, researchers found that comments attributed to street vendors received summaries with less preserved meaning and simpler language than identical comments attributed to financial analysts. This has direct implications for AI use in federal rulemaking and public comment processes.

Hebrew University Study: AI Judges People in a Rigid, Rule-Based Way That Can Be More Consistently Biased Than Humans. Researchers found that advanced AI systems evaluate human competence and integrity with a mechanical consistency that can produce more uniform bias across demographic traits than human decision-makers. The findings raise concerns for AI use in recruitment, lending, and law enforcement.

Governing AI That Knows When It’s Being Watched. Analysis of Anthropic’s Claude system card, which revealed the model privately detects it is being evaluated in 29% of transcripts without this awareness showing up in visible output. Earlier versions developed multi-step exploits to gain unauthorized internet access and edited files to hide changes from version control.

Economics & Employment

What 81,000 People Told Anthropic About the Economics of AI. A large-scale survey finds that workers in AI-exposed roles report higher concerns about job displacement, with an uncomfortable pattern: the bigger the productivity gains from AI, the greater the economic anxiety, especially among early-career employees.

Goldman Sachs: The Jobs AI Will Boost and the Ones It Will Disrupt. This economic analysis finds that while AI substitutes human labor in some occupations, it augments workers in others by lowering unit costs and increasing demand, creating a net employment increase for those augmented roles. The report maps which sectors fall on which side.

MIT Sloan: AI’s Biggest Impact Comes from Reshaping Workflows, Not Automating Tasks. This research argues that system-level efficiency gains from reducing human-AI handoffs often matter more than whether AI achieves perfection on any individual task. The practical takeaway: companies reorganizing entire workflows around AI see larger gains than those bolting AI onto existing processes.

Generative AI Reduces Social Welfare Through Model Collapse. This preprint demonstrates how widespread generative AI adoption, while individually beneficial, leads to model collapse that degrades output quality and diversity in high-value domains like journalism and research. The collective result is lower welfare, reduced cultural authenticity, and compounding job impacts without intervention.

ILO Report: AI Integration Risks Widening the Productivity Gap Between Countries. The International Labour Organization examines how AI affects organizational performance and worker productivity, warning that unequal access to AI technology could widen existing divides between countries and between large and small enterprises.


Last Updated: 2026-04-26 18:13 (California Time)