By Jody Godoy
(Reuters) -California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into state law on Monday a requirement that ChatGPT developer OpenAI and other big players disclose how they plan to mitigate potential catastrophic risks from their cutting-edge AI models.
California is the home to top AI companies including OpenAI, Alphabet’s Google, Meta Platforms, Nvidia and Anthropic, and with this law seeks to lead on regulation of an industry critical to its economy, Newsom said.
“California has proven that we can establish regulations to protect our communities while also ensuring that the growing AI industry continues to thrive,” Newsom said in a press release on the law.
Newsom’s office said the law, known as SB 53, fills a gap left by the U.S. Congress, which so far has not passed broad AI legislation, and provides a model for the U.S. to follow.
If federal standards are put in place, Newsom said the state legislature should “ensure alignment with those standards – all while maintaining the high bar established by SB 53.”
Last year, Newsom vetoed California’s first attempt at AI legislation, which had faced fierce industry pushback. The bill would have required companies that spent more than $100 million on their AI models to hire third-party auditors annually to review risk assessments and allowed the state to levy penalties in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The new law requires companies with more than $500 million in revenue to assess the risk that their cutting-edge technology could break free of human control or aid the development of bioweapons, and disclose those assessments to the public. It allows for fines of up to $1 million per violation.
Jack Clark, co-founder of AI company Anthropic, called the law “a strong framework that balances public safety with continued innovation.”
(Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Chris Sanders and Edmund Klamann)
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