What’s New

White House AI Policy Framework

White House Drops a National AI Policy Framework Covering Seven Legislative Pillars. Released March 20, the administration’s first comprehensive federal AI blueprint proposes legislation on child safety, intellectual property, workforce development, and federal preemption of state AI laws. It is the clearest signal yet that Washington wants to centralize AI governance.

Gibson Dunn Breaks Down the Framework’s Legal Architecture. This law firm analysis walks through the framework’s opposition to creating new AI agencies, its preference for sector-specific oversight, and its stance that courts (not regulators) should handle IP disputes. Useful for anyone trying to understand what the framework actually does and doesn’t do.

Inside the White House Plan to Override 24+ State AI Laws. An investigative look at the federal preemption push, examining which state regulations would be displaced and which lobbying forces shaped the framework. The piece identifies winners and losers in the resulting power shift.

America’s AI Governance Crisis Is a Democracy Crisis. Laura MacCleery argues that the fragmented, industry-influenced state of U.S. AI governance is not just a policy problem but a structural threat to democratic accountability. She connects the new framework to broader patterns of regulatory capture.

What the AI Framework Means for Employers and HR. A legal advisory focused on workplace implications: AI-assisted hiring, worker monitoring, and employer liability under the proposed federal rules. Directly relevant for anyone managing people or compliance.

When Government Abdicates: A Full Response to the White House AI Framework. Rachel Maron systematically critiques each pillar of the framework, arguing it represents a fundamental retreat from the government’s responsibility to protect citizens from AI harms. The most detailed critical take available.

K&L Gates Overview of the Framework’s Seven Pillars. A concise walkthrough of the framework’s structure, covering child safeguards, anti-fraud measures, NO FAKES Act support, censorship restrictions, and workforce programs.

Policy & Regulation

Trump’s Anthropic Ban Is Lawless. Congress Must Respond. Legal analyst Alan Raul argues the administration’s effort to bar Anthropic from Pentagon contracts lacks statutory authority and sets a dangerous precedent for executive interference in AI procurement. He calls on Congress to pass legislation establishing clear limits.

Anthropic, the Pentagon, and Claude’s Split Personality. The Chicago Council on Global Affairs examines the ethical tensions between Anthropic’s published AI constitution and the demands of military deployment. Raises hard questions about dual-use AI and corporate ethics in national security.

UK Government Publishes Landmark Report on AI and Copyright. The official report mandated by the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 examines the economic and legal implications of using copyrighted works to train AI. It confirms the UK has walked back its proposed broad copyright exception for AI training.

UK Abandons Bold AI Training Copyright Exception. A legal analysis of what the UK government’s policy reversal means for AI developers, rights holders, and the competitive position of the UK AI sector. Clear-eyed about the practical consequences.

The “AI Terrible Ten”: Worst State AI Policies and Better Alternatives. R Street Institute report identifies the most problematic state-level AI laws, arguing that overly broad definitions and harsh penalties (including felony charges) could stifle innovation and produce unintended legal consequences.

Regulating AI Agents: Current Frameworks Fall Short. This arXiv preprint argues that existing regulations like the EU AI Act inadequately address the risks posed by autonomous AI agents, including performance failures, misuse, and economic inequality. It calls for revised policies on monitoring and enforcement.

Economics & Employment

Why AI Hasn’t Caused a Job Apocalypse, So Far. Writing in Nature, Martha Gimbel reviews the data and finds no significant employment shifts or job losses from AI since ChatGPT’s 2022 launch. With only 18% of businesses actually using AI, the gap between hype and reality remains wide.

New Index Identifies 9.3 Million U.S. Jobs at Risk from AI. Tufts University’s Digital Planet lab released the American AI Jobs Risk Index, assessing displacement risk across 784 occupations. High-earning knowledge workers like programmers and writers face the most exposure, with potential annual household income losses in the hundreds of billions.

Anthropic Economic Index: How Claude Is Actually Being Used. Anthropic’s latest data-driven report tracks real patterns of task delegation and skill substitution across the economy in February 2026. Primary-source material for anyone trying to understand AI’s actual (not theoretical) labor market effects.

Federal AI Preemption and What It Means for Hiring. An analysis of how uniform federal AI standards will accelerate adoption in HR and talent acquisition. Argues the framework will reshape skills demand and workforce development, with outsized effects in regulated sectors.

AI Safety Newsletter: Automated Warfare and Tech Layoffs. Covers AI-driven layoffs at major tech companies (Meta reportedly cutting 20%, Amazon 10% of engineering roles) alongside the Pentagon’s “AI-First” strategy enabling autonomous weapons systems. Also discusses a pro-human open letter advocating oversight and accountability.

Ethics & Safety

Diversity Laundering: When AI-Generated Faces Replace Real People in Ads. An investigation into the growing use of synthetic faces in advertising campaigns, where brands use AI-generated diverse individuals as a substitute for genuine inclusion. Raises pointed questions about authenticity, representation, and accountability.

Generative AI and Deepfake Liability: The Legal Gaps. Legal scholarship exploring liability frameworks for AI-generated synthetic media, especially in political and reputational contexts. Concludes that current legal doctrines are inadequate for the harms deepfakes can cause.

Research

The Matthew Effect at Scale: AI Makes the Rich Richer in Attention. An academic article arguing that while generative AI lowers the cost of producing content, it paradoxically concentrates influence among already-prominent voices because attention remains scarce. Implications for publishing, media, and who gets heard.

Anthropic’s 80,000-Person Study: What People Actually Want from AI. The largest qualitative AI study ever conducted surveyed Claude users across 159 countries. The finding that surprised: users’ top desires center on quality of life and human connection, not productivity. Relevant for product design and governance alike.

What CS Students Think About AI Ethics. A survey of 230 computer science students reveals broad agreement on AI’s impact in medicine, education, and media, but notable gender differences in threat perception around topics like warfare. Useful data point for AI education and governance discussions.


Last Updated: 2026-03-25 07:31 (California Time)