Colorado Gov. Jared Polis on May 14 signed into law Senate Bill 26-189, which repeals and replaces Colorado’s controversial AI law that was enacted in 2024 and would have gone into effect June 30. The new law will go into effect Jan. 1, 2027.
Posts published in “Artificial Intelligence”
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin on March 24 vetoed House Bill 2094, the “High-Risk Artificial Intelligence Developer and Deployer Act.” The veto can only be overridden by a two-thirds vote of the House, which seems unlikely given the close vote in the House on the Senate substitute (52-Y; 46-N).
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox on March 27 signed into law Senate Bill 226 relating to the use of generative artificial intelligence in consumer transactions and regulated services. The law goes into effect on May 7, 2025.
The Massachusetts Office of Attorney General (“AGO”) recently issued an Advisory on the development, supply, and use of artificial intelligence (“AI”). The Advisory provides guidance in the context of the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act,[1] Anti-Discrimination Law,[2] Data Security Law,[3] and associated regulations.
The upward trend in data privacy legislation continued in 2023. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, “[a]t least 40 states and Puerto Rico introduced or considered at least 350 consumer privacy bills in 2023,” a significant increase from the 200 bills in 2022.





