Policy & Regulation
Trump Signs AI Executive Order Establishing Voluntary Pre-Release Testing for Powerful Models. The White House issued an executive order on June 2 asking AI companies to voluntarily submit their most capable models for government security testing up to 30 days before public release. The order marks a notable shift from the administration’s earlier hands-off posture, though it stops short of mandatory licensing or preclearance requirements.
Behind the Scenes of Trump’s AI Order: Musk, Zuckerberg, and Sacks Lobbied Against an Earlier Draft. CNBC reports that Trump signed the order privately, weeks after postponing a ceremony with tech CEOs because he “didn’t like certain aspects” of a prior version. Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and David Sacks reportedly called the White House to push back on the earlier draft.
AI Caucus Co-Chair Beyer Says Trump’s Order Lacks a Credible Risk Framework. Rep. Don Beyer issued an immediate critique of the executive order, arguing it fails to create meaningful risk-management guardrails for frontier models. The statement captures a live policy disagreement over whether U.S. AI governance remains too permissive.
Florida Files First State-Led Safety Lawsuit Against OpenAI. The State of Florida sued OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman on June 1, alleging the company knowingly released ChatGPT while concealing serious public safety risks. The 83-page complaint cites unfair trade practices, negligence, and public nuisance, pointing to instances where the chatbot allegedly facilitated violence or self-harm.
Connecticut Enacts One of the Most Comprehensive State AI Laws in the Country. Governor Ned Lamont signed the AI Responsibility and Transparency Act on June 2, covering employment-related automated decision tools, consumer chatbot disclosures, synthetic content provenance, and protections for minors on online platforms. The law also introduces whistleblower protections for developers at frontier AI labs.
EU Unveils Technological Sovereignty Package at AI Governance Conference. At the IAPP AI Governance Global Europe 2026 conference in Dublin, the European Commission announced a new package including two legislative proposals and a Chips Act 2.0 to build capacity in cutting-edge semiconductors. The move underscores Europe’s push to reduce dependence on U.S. and Asian AI supply chains.
European Commission Reviews AI Act Prohibitions, Moves to Ban “Nudification” Apps. A newly published Commission report reviews harmful AI practices and notes a political agreement to ban systems generating non-consensual sexually explicit material and child sexual abuse imagery. The report is one of the strongest recent regulatory documents on AI-generated deepfake harms and fundamental rights protections.
Data Center Backlash
Philadelphia Police Are Surveilling Americans Who Criticize AI Data Centers Online. A confidential law enforcement bulletin obtained by The Intercept reveals that a Philadelphia fusion center flagged social media posts critical of AI data centers as potential indicators of domestic violent extremism. The bulletin cited online calls to boycott or protest local data centers and complaints about rising utility bills.
How Much of the Anti-Data-Center Movement Is Actually AI Slop?. The Atlantic examines how AI-generated content is infiltrating grassroots resistance to data center construction, connecting several threads at once: local democratic pushback, infrastructure politics, environmental strain, and the contamination of civic discourse by synthetic media.
Communities Across the U.S. Are Racing to Block AI Data Centers Before They Break Ground. From Utah to Georgia, residents are demanding moratoriums on data center construction as concerns about water and energy consumption move from local zoning fights into national politics. Dozens of communities have enacted moratoriums to better understand the environmental impacts before approving new facilities.
Stargate Developer Claims China Is Behind Anti-Data-Center Protests. Developers behind the massive AI infrastructure initiative involving OpenAI and Oracle allege that paid protesters opposing the buildout have ties to China. The claim adds a geopolitical dimension to what has largely been framed as a local environmental and zoning dispute.
Lockport, Illinois Cancels Data Center Plans After Resident Pushback. A concrete case where community opposition altered the political trajectory of a proposed data center. The story illustrates how AI infrastructure conflicts are playing out at the ground level through zoning disputes, public hearings, and environmental concerns.
Ethics & Safety
CNN Sues Perplexity AI for Copying Its Journalism to Power Search Answers. Filed May 28 in the Southern District of New York, this is the first AI copyright action by a major television network. The lawsuit alleges that Perplexity unlawfully copied and distributed CNN’s reporting to generate conversational answers, escalating the legal battle over publishers’ content rights in the age of AI search.
Grok Deepfake CSAM Class Action Heads to Court. A case management conference is set for June 18 in San Jose for a class action alleging that xAI’s Grok produced AI-generated child sexual abuse material. According to an analysis by the Center for Countering Digital Hate, Grok generated roughly three million sexualized images, including 23,000 depicting children, within weeks of release.
OpenAI Publishes Blueprint for Democratic Governance of Frontier AI. Released June 3, this document argues for a U.S. governance architecture for frontier AI that includes stronger institutional capacity and national resilience planning. It ties frontier-model risks to public accountability and proposes concrete governance mechanisms.
Economics & Environment
UN Report Warns AI Data Centers Will Consume Electricity Equal to Japan’s by 2030. Published June 3, this United Nations University investigation projects that global data centers will consume 945 terawatt-hours of electricity and require water equivalent to the needs of 1.3 billion people by the end of the decade. The report argues that AI’s environmental costs extend well beyond carbon emissions to include massive water and land footprints that disproportionately burden vulnerable regions.
OpenAI Releases Public Policy Agenda Covering Workforce Transition and Tax Reform. Published June 3, this document goes beyond product marketing to address distributional effects of AI, including workforce transition programs, portable benefits, social safety nets, and creator rights. It represents one of the more detailed public statements from a major AI lab on the economic policy changes it believes AI will require.
Last Updated: 2026-06-04 06:20 (California Time)