Richart Ruddie writes:
AI is no longer a futuristic promise — it’s a present-day juggernaut reshaping the world, perhaps the biggest global change since the internet was opened to the public. The issue with such a monumental change is we’re all being affected by it with or without our knowledge.
The US stands at a crossroads in President Donald Trump’s second term, where a deregulatory push threatens to unravel years of AI governance efforts. The appointment of David Sacks as the White House AI czar signals a pro-innovation stance, but at what cost to privacy? With a Biden-era AI executive order revoked and new regulations in flux, businesses and residents alike face an uncertain landscape. Will this hands-off approach unleash AI’s potential or expose us to unchecked data exploitation?
Where President Joe Biden’s policies had established safety testing requirements for advanced AI models, Trump’s moves explicitly prioritize innovation and technological development, framing deregulation as “unleashing the potential of the American citizen” by removing what the administration characterizes as bureaucratic barriers to progress in the AI sector.
Read more at Corporate Compliance Insights.