The White House AI Framework
White House Releases National AI Policy Framework (Primary Source). Released March 20, the framework lays out federal legislative recommendations covering child safety, data center energy costs, IP licensing, and workforce training. The big move: it pushes to preempt the growing patchwork of state-level AI laws with a single federal standard.
Gibson Dunn: Toward a National AI Policy. A detailed legal breakdown of the framework’s push for unified federal standards and sector-specific oversight by existing agencies rather than new regulators. Notes that congressional passage faces real hurdles given partisan divides.
Big Govt Props Up Big Tech: Why the Federal AI Landgrab Is a Win for the AI Bros. A sharp critique arguing that federal preemption of state AI laws disproportionately benefits large AI vendors at the expense of public interest. Worth reading as a counterpoint to the framework’s pro-innovation framing.
California’s AI Employment Laws Leave Workers Exposed. With the federal framework pushing preemption, this CalMatters piece highlights what’s at stake at the state level. California’s vetoed “No Robo Bosses Act” and delayed transparency laws (not effective until 2030) leave workers vulnerable to biased algorithmic decisions right now.
The Blueprint of Preemption: Inside the White House Plan to Standardize US AI Law. An in-depth look at how the framework aims to override 24+ state-level AI laws. Examines the constitutional tensions and what it means for states that have passed stronger consumer and worker protections.
What Employers and Business Leaders Need to Know About the AI Framework. A practical compliance-focused guide from SGR Law covering how the framework interacts with existing employment, HR, and workplace AI regulations.
Policy & Regulation
America’s AI Governance Crisis Is a Democracy Crisis. TechPolicy.Press argues the US failure to build coherent AI governance isn’t just a tech policy gap but a threat to democratic accountability. The power vacuum is being filled by executive action and corporate self-regulation, sidelining Congress.
Trump’s Anthropic Ban Is Lawless. Congress Must Respond with a Law. Legal scholar Alan Raul argues the administration’s ban on Anthropic’s AI systems from Pentagon contracts lacks legal authority and sets a dangerous precedent for executive overreach in AI procurement.
UK Government Report on Copyright and Artificial Intelligence. An official policy paper assessing how copyright law applies to AI training data. This will shape the legal framework for AI development in the UK and feeds into the broader global debate over AI and intellectual property.
Treasury Launches AI Innovation Series for Financial Services. A new public-private initiative focused on AI governance in financial services, covering fraud detection, credit underwriting, and risk management. Signals that sector-specific AI regulation in finance is picking up speed.
Russia Publishes Draft Law on Sovereign AI. A proposed Russian law would mandate that neural networks be created domestically and trained exclusively on Russian data. Another data point in the growing trend of “sovereign AI” and the geopolitical fracturing of AI development.
Ethics & Safety
Diversity Laundering: AI-Generated Faces Are Transforming Advertising. Brands are using generative AI to produce synthetic diverse faces for campaigns instead of hiring real models from underrepresented groups. The piece examines the economic harm to models and photographers of color and the deceptive implications for consumers.
AI Hiring Tools Are Rejecting Graduates Before a Human Ever Reads Their CV. A look at how automated recruitment systems are screening out qualified candidates without human oversight, raising questions about bias and fairness in AI-filtered job markets.
Anthropic’s 80,000-User Study on How People Relate to AI. A large-scale study examining how users interact with and form relationships with AI systems. The findings raise important questions about dependency, trust, and the ethical design of AI assistants.
Economics & Employment
CFOs Don’t Expect Large AI Labor Impact This Year (NBER Working Paper). A survey of 750 CFOs finds minimal AI-driven employment changes through 2026, with routine clerical roles expected to decline slightly by 2028 while technical roles grow. AI investments are focused on productivity gains (projected at 3% this year) rather than headcount cuts.
Federal AI Preemption Is Rewriting the Job Market Rules. An analysis of how a uniform national AI standard could accelerate workplace AI adoption and reshape hiring practices. Outlines which job categories face the most immediate disruption and what skills workers should prioritize.
Research
Give an LLM Agent a Tool and It Breaks: Safety Violation Rates Spike to 85%. This arXiv paper finds that granting LLM agents executable tools causes safety violations to spike dramatically despite perfect text-only compliance. External guardrails mask but don’t resolve the underlying misalignment problem.
Behavioral Feasible Set: How Vendor Alignment Constrains AI Decision Support. A new paper formalizing how alignment choices baked into commercial AI systems limit the range of recommendations organizations can receive. The opaque value judgments embedded by vendors create governance challenges that most buyers don’t fully appreciate.
The Matthew Effect at Scale: AI Output Explosion and Attention Scarcity. An academic exploration of how generative AI is lowering the cost of producing content but may actually concentrate attention and worsen inequality rather than democratizing influence.
Last Updated: 2026-03-24 18:54 (California Time)