The Data Center Backlash
Polls and Protests Show Americans Are Turning on Data Centers. A Gallup poll finds seven in ten Americans oppose building AI data centers in their area, with nearly half “strongly” opposed. The piece frames the siting fight as a defining political flashpoint of the AI era.
Americans’ Hostility Toward Data Centers May Just Be Getting Started. New academic research links data center proximity to rising power bills. Opposition has stalled or killed more than $156 billion in planned construction across 48 projects last year, according to Data Center Watch.
How Anti-Data Center Activists Are Taking on Big Tech and Winning. More than 70 data center rejections or restrictions occurred in the first four months of 2026 alone, exceeding the total for all of 2025, not counting projects quietly withdrawn under local pressure.
The AI Backlash Is Growing in Oregon and Beyond. Oregon has imposed a moratorium on data center tax breaks as public opposition over electricity rates, water use, and environmental costs becomes a real constraint on AI infrastructure buildout.
Utah Residents Protest a 9-Gigawatt AI Data Center Backed by Kevin O’Leary. The proposed 40,000-acre campus in Box Elder County would sit just north of the already shrinking Great Salt Lake, a sanctuary for migratory birds, and require a dedicated natural gas plant to power it.
Policy & Regulation
FTC Begins Enforcing the Take It Down Act Against AI Deepfakes. The FTC is now requiring platforms to promptly remove nonconsensual intimate images, including AI-generated ones, following user notice. This is the first major federal enforcement mechanism targeting synthetic sexual content.
Two Men Charged With Creating AI-Generated Porn Under New Deepfake Law. Among the first federal prosecutions under the Take It Down Act, this case marks the moment deepfake regulation moved from legislative debate into criminal enforcement.
California Issues Executive Order to Prepare Workers for AI Disruption. Governor Newsom directs state agencies, labor groups, and universities to develop policies on severance, expanded unemployment insurance, worker ownership models, and AI hiring trend tracking.
Colorado Retools Its AI Law, Swapping Prescriptive Rules for Disclosure Requirements. The legislature passed SB 189 to replace its pioneering risk-based AI Act with a narrower disclosure-focused framework, shifting liability toward deployers and easing compliance burdens after industry pushback.
Illinois Bill Regulating Frontier AI Models Advances. Senate Bill 315 would require major model developers to adopt transparency frameworks, use third-party audits, and report catastrophic-risk capabilities. Another data point in the growing patchwork of state-level AI regulation.
The U.S. Has 1,200 AI Bills and No Good Test for Any of Them. Sonnenfeld and Marcus argue the country lacks a coherent AI policy framework, surveying how California’s SB 53, New York’s RAISE Act, Texas’s TRAIGA, and Connecticut’s SB5 each take different approaches to the same problems.
FTC Fines Cox Media Group for Deceptive “Active Listening” AI Marketing Claims. The agency alleges firms falsely marketed an AI service as using smart-device conversations for ad targeting. The case treats misleading “AI-powered” surveillance claims as a consumer protection issue, even where the capability didn’t work as advertised.
Ethics & Safety
METR Publishes First Independent Audit of Frontier AI Models From Four Major Labs. Anthropic, Google, Meta, and OpenAI granted access to their most capable internal models. METR concludes that periodic third-party risk assessment should become an industry standard, noting that standard pre-deployment evaluations have significant blind spots.
Brookings Proposes Treating AI Companion Bots Like Unsafe Consumer Products. The brief argues these bots create public health harms through addictive design and weak guardrails, particularly for children. Rather than outright bans, the author suggests a product-recall model similar to pharmaceuticals and automobiles.
Is Heavy AI Use Stunting Children’s Cognitive Development?. Brookings researcher Rebecca Winthrop asks whether AI tools are shortcutting the development of writing, reasoning, and critical thinking skills. The piece proposes measurable child-development indicators rather than treating AI in schools as purely a plagiarism problem.
ArXiv Will Ban Authors for a Year If They Let AI Do All the Work. The major preprint server is cracking down on AI-generated submissions with hallucinated references or leftover chatbot instructions. Context: a Lancet study found fabricated citations in biomedical papers have risen twelvefold since 2023.
Nature: Why AI Cannot Do Good Science Without Humans. This editorial cautions that while AI accelerates discovery, human judgment, ethics, and “messiness” remain essential to avoid polluting the scientific literature with low-quality or fabricated work.
Economics & Employment
Meta Cuts 8,000 Jobs as It Pivots Toward AI. Meta notified roughly 8,000 employees of layoffs while reshaping thousands of other roles as part of its AI restructuring. A concrete case connecting AI capital spending to changing white-collar labor demand at a major tech company.
New Data Shows AI-Exposed Industries Are Growing, but Workers Capture Only 29% of the Gains. Research using U.S. administrative data finds generative AI exposure increases sector output by roughly 10% and wages by 4.8%, but the bulk of gains flow to capital and profits, especially in states with low labor mobility.
NY Fed: The Decline in AI-Exposed Job Postings May Predate ChatGPT. A notably skeptical analysis from the New York Fed finds that while job postings in AI-exposed occupations have fallen, the trend started before ChatGPT’s release and stabilized after 2023, making it hard to attribute directly to AI adoption.
The AI Bots Are Coming and the Young Are Booing, Not Applauding. Reuters tracks rising anxiety among young people about AI’s effects on jobs, education, and daily life. The piece frames AI’s social legitimacy problem as a generational issue, not just a technical adoption curve.
The AI Jobs Panic Is Still Waiting on the Evidence. This analysis questions widespread displacement fears, noting limited evidence of mass layoffs so far. It argues for evidence-based policy rather than premature regulation that could slow beneficial adoption.
Research & Governance Frameworks
NIST Report on Security Risks From Autonomous AI Agents. This official synthesis of stakeholder responses covers prompt-injection attacks, insecure deployments, and the government’s role in setting standards for agentic AI. One of the strongest official resources this week connecting technical agent risks to public-sector adoption.
Whose Voice Counts? How Public Input on AI Policy Gets Filtered. An analysis of over 10,000 public letters to the White House on AI policy finds individuals emphasize job loss, ethics, and energy use, while the private sector focuses on innovation and security. The resulting Action Plan disproportionately reflects industry priorities.
GAO Develops Framework to Assess U.S. AI Competitiveness. The report evaluates risks including job dislocation, energy consumption, and safety concerns alongside potential gains in growth and security. It stresses the need for balanced policy to maintain global leadership while addressing societal downsides.
Do AI Risks Actually Require Extraordinary Government Intervention?. The authors argue that AI labor-market impacts have been slow, with GDP growth and unemployment consistent with normal technology adoption patterns. They suggest misuse risks are better addressed through resilience measures than costly nonproliferation regimes.
Last Updated: 2026-05-24 07:50 (California Time)