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CA Lawmakers Approve Potentially Standard-Setting AI Bill The California Legislature passed a bill ( SB 1047 ) that could become the national standard for regulating artificial intelligence. The measure...
CA Lawmakers Pass PBM Legislation California joined a nationwide movement to tighten restrictions on pharmacy benefit managers with the approval of SB 966 days before adjourning its legislative session...
Data privacy, long a focus of state lawmakers across the country, is poised to enter a new space: your brain. Elon Musk has been making headlines for years now with his company Neuralink , which seeks...
Google Agrees to Help Fund Journalism in CA California lawmakers reached a deal with Google that will provide about $250 million in public and private funding for newsrooms across the state over the...
MA Expands Access to Maternal Health Care Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healy (D) signed legislation ( HB 4999 ) expanding access to maternal health services in the state. Among other things, the measure...
California lawmakers reached a deal with Google that will provide about $250 million in public and private funding for newsrooms across the state over the next five years. Although Google has committed to spending $105 million on the effort, critics say that’s roughly the amount of money the company makes in half an hour. (PLURIBUS NEWS)
Although the Federal Reserve has been reluctant to create a central bank digital currency, Wyoming is developing its own U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin, which it is planning to launch next year. The state’s intent is to give individuals a faster, cheaper way to transact with local businesses. The state also plans to invest the reserves that back its stablecoin in treasuries and reverse repos, and use the interest generated from those investments to help fund public education.
This isn’t Wyoming’s first foray into crypto. Since 2018 the state has passed over 30 pieces of legislation aimed at creating a favorable regulatory environment for the industry. (CNBC)
A bipartisan measure (AB 3080) that would have required pornographic websites to verify that users are of legal age died ahead of the state’s Aug. 31 legislative adjournment date. The fact that such legislation has been passed mostly in red states didn’t stop the deep blue state’s Assembly from passing AB 3080 unanimously in May or its Senate Judiciary Committee from approving it unanimously in July. But the measure was held up in the Senate Appropriations Committee over First Amendment and other concerns. (CALMATTERS, LEXISNEXIS STATE NET)
—Compiled by SNCJ Managing Editor Korey Clark
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