President Trump Signs AI Executive Order
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The president said AI would make the U.S. stronger but that it also posed a national security risk without government oversight.
The order, intended to review artificial intelligence models that could pose risks to the US, is strictly voluntary.
By Nate Raymond BOSTON, June 2 (Reuters) - A federal judge in Boston on Tuesday will hear a bid by Democratic-led states and voting rights groups to block U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order aiming to tighten rules for mail-in voting.
Gov. Bob Ferguson signed an executive order on Monday directing state agencies to develop and adopt standard workplace accommodations for employees experiencing perimenopause and menopause.
Developers of frontier artificial intelligence models will have the option to voluntarily submit new technologies for review by federal cybersecurity agencies under a new executive order that comes after President Donald Trump backed away from an expected order last month.
The Democratic Party indicated in a court filing on Monday that it is appealing a judge's decision last week not to immediately block President Donald Trump's executive order tightening rules on mail-in voting.
A federal judge has heard from voting rights groups and a coalition of two dozen states that want the courts to halt President Donald Trump’s executive order creating a federal voter list and limiting mail voting,
President Trump signed a narrowed executive order on artificial intelligence and cybersecurity Tuesday. Why it matters: The new order lets the White House kick the can down the road while it considers new rules for cutting-edge AI models and what to do about AI's advanced cybersecurity capabilities.