What’s New

Policy & Regulation

42 state attorneys general open a probe into OpenAI as its IPO looms. A large coalition of state AGs issued subpoenas seeking documents on advertising, engagement design, model sycophancy, and how the company handles minors, seniors, and health data. The timing, just as the firm prepares to go public, turns consumer-protection scrutiny into a material legal risk.

Washington orders a leading lab to halt foreign access to its top models. The Commerce Department told Anthropic to suspend transfers of its most advanced models over fears they could reach foreign military or intelligence users. It is the first time export-control law has been pointed squarely at frontier AI, and it sets a precedent for unilateral government intervention.

How the Great American AI Act stacks up against state rules. A clear comparison of the bipartisan federal draft and the patchwork of state laws it would override. The piece is most useful on preemption, explaining which state protections would be paused and which would survive.

The hands-off era of AI oversight is ending. A reported look at the competing visions from the White House, Congress, and industry over who should govern AI and how. It centers on a bipartisan House effort to set rules for the most powerful models.

Brussels orders WhatsApp to host rival AI assistants for free. The European Commission used rare interim antitrust powers to force Meta to restore free access for competing chatbots while it investigates. The case treats messaging apps as strategic gateways for general-purpose AI, a notable competition-policy signal.

A practitioner checklist for AI antitrust risk. A structured map of where competition enforcement is heating up, from algorithmic collusion to acqui-hires and data consolidation. A handy reference as AI moves to the center of the economy.

European & International Regulation

The EU publishes its code for labeling AI-generated content. This voluntary code helps providers and deployers meet the AI Act transparency rules that take effect in August 2026. It covers marking deepfakes, flagging AI-generated text on public-interest topics, and disclosing when users are talking to a chatbot.

The Financial Stability Board sets out 12 practices for AI in finance. The consultation report covers board oversight, data governance, and the management of cyber and third-party risks tied to AI. It is aimed at financial institutions weighing systemic risk as they roll out these tools.

Japan asks banks to prepare for frontier AI threats. The country’s financial regulator and central bank issued near-term guidance to financial institutions on AI-enabled cyber and operational risk. It is an early example of a financial supervisor treating frontier AI as a live threat to the sector.

Economics & Employment

Anthropic pledges $200m to study AI’s economic impact. The fund will back empirical research on how AI reshapes labor markets, alongside a national fellowship program placing workers in nonprofits. It raises a pointed question about whether the firms accelerating disruption should also help pay to soften it.

The AI layoff wave is turning into a powder keg. The piece looks at companies blaming AI for job cuts even while posting strong profits, and tries to separate real automation from a convenient story. It notes growing worker resentment as a small group of AI insiders gets very rich.

PwC finds AI is splitting the labor market into two tracks. Drawing on more than a billion job ads across 27 countries, the report says AI skills now command a large wage premium. At the same time, entry-level roles increasingly demand the judgment and leadership once expected of senior staff.

Stanford launches a tracker for AI’s economic effects. The new indicators project measures adoption, productivity, and labor outcomes in something closer to real time. The first update shows weaker early-career hiring in AI-exposed jobs and argues better measurement is overdue.

What the 2026 labor data actually shows about AI and jobs. A sober read that pushes back on hype from both sides, finding no aggregate unemployment spike yet but a closing door for new graduates. It warns that the calm reflects today’s tools, not the frontier models now arriving.

Ethics, Safety & Copyright

Anthropic calls for binding rules on frontier AI. The policy package argues for mandatory safety testing, transparency, independent evaluation, and government power to block dangerous deployments. It is striking because a frontier developer is asking for enforceable authority rather than voluntary pledges.

The 2026 International AI Safety Report lands. Chaired by Yoshua Bengio, this global assessment pulls together the evidence on risks from general-purpose AI, including cyberattacks, loss of control, and misuse for biological weapons. It is written for policymakers trying to act without waiting for perfect proof of harm.

Google fights a lawsuit over training its music AI on YouTube. Independent musicians allege their uploads were used to train a music-generation model without permission. The case tests whether platform terms of service quietly double as AI training licenses.

Warner Music buys a startup that hunts unauthorized AI. The deal brings in tools to track voice clones, AI avatars, and style copying. It signals that rightsholders are building their own enforcement systems rather than waiting on courts and regulators.

A judge lets a copyright claim against Meta over AI training proceed. An adult-film producer accuses Meta of downloading thousands of its works to train models. The ruling keeps alive a closely watched front in the fight over what counts as fair use for training data.

A new paper on how voice cloning threatens vocal identity. The legal and ethical analysis compares publicity rights, personality rights, and data-protection rules as ways to protect people’s voices. It is timely as audio deepfakes and likeness disputes multiply.

Data Centers & Local Backlash

12 GW announced. 5 GW under construction. What happens next? The Gap Between the Press Release and the Power Grid

$130bn of data-center projects blocked so far in 2026. Bipartisan local opposition has halted or delayed more than 75 buildouts over worries about power bills, water use, and noise. The slowdown is a real constraint for both the AI race against China and labs hungry for compute.

Most Americans are wary of the data-center boom. A Reuters/Ipsos poll finds majorities worried about local construction, electricity costs, and community effects. The skepticism cuts across party lines and is feeding fights over permitting and energy.

A New Jersey town bans data centers and asks the state to pause the rest. Red Bank voted to block local facilities and called for a statewide halt until oversight laws exist. It is a concrete example of municipalities pushing back on grid strain, water use, and property values.


Last Updated: 2026-06-16 07:47 (California Time)