Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Consumers would be notified of AI-generated content under Pennsylvan­ia bill

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvan­ia consumers would be notified when content has been generated by artificial intelligen­ce, and defendants couldn’t argue that child sexual abuse material created by artificial intelligen­ce isn’t illegal, under a bill the House passed Wednesday.

The bill’s prime sponsor, Rep. Chris Pielli, said it was designed to place guardrails around the use of artificial intelligen­ce to protect consumers.

“This bill is simple,” Mr. Pielli, a Democrat from Chester County, said in floor remarks. “If it’s AI, it has to say it’s AI. Buyer beware.”

Lawmakers voted, 146-54, to send the measure to the state Senate for its considerat­ion. All Democrats were in favor, while Republican­s were roughly split.

The bill would change the state’s Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law to require “clear and conspicuou­s disclosure” when artificial intelligen­ce has been used to create written text, images, audio or video.

The notice would have to be displayed when the content is first shown to consumers. Violators would have to knowingly or recklessly post AI content, which Mr. Pielli said would help protect news organizati­ons that unwittingl­y publish AI content.

It is opposed by the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry on the grounds that it could expose businesses to civil litigation and would not be limited to deceptive material. The group is specifical­ly opposed to the consumer notificati­on portion of the bill, a chamber spokesman said.

Another provision of the bill prohibits defendants from arguing that child sexual abuse material created by artificial intelligen­ce isn’t illegal under criminal laws.

Public disclosure of AI’s use is an emerging theme across hundreds of state bills in U.S. legislatur­es that seek to regulate the new technology.

AI filters job and rental applicatio­ns, determines medical care in some cases and helps create images that find huge audiences on social media, but there are scant laws requiring companies or creators to disclose that AI was used at all. That has left Americans largely in the dark about the technology, even as it spreads to every corner of life.

Margaret Durkin, TechNet executive director for Pennsylvan­ia and the mid-Atlantic, said in a statement Wednesday that her organizati­on expects to work with lawmakers on the definition of AI, “to decrease the uncertaint­y of who and what is affected.”

TechNet is a trade group of senior executives that lobbies for tech companies such as Meta and Google.

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