All posts tagged: Regulating

US refuses to budge on environmental impact of tech, regulating Big Tech at G7 – POLITICO

US refuses to budge on environmental impact of tech, regulating Big Tech at G7 – POLITICO

The environmental impact of AI specifically, as it consumes huge amounts of energy, has become a talking point in Europe, with the European Environment Agency warning earlier this month that the “the rapid expansion of AI presents a growing challenge to achieving climate neutrality.” But an emphasis on combating the environmental impact of tech is “a red line for the United States,” a digital ministry representative, granted anonymity due to French protocol, told reporters, adding that France respects its “partners’ red lines.”  Environmental issues have been “the most complicated” to get a consensus among the G7 countries, the same representative added, saying that the wording of that part of the declaration may only be endorsed by the “G7 presidency,” i.e. France.  “This is a step back from the initial ambitions,” the same representative admitted, adding that France “knew it would be complicated.”   More broadly, “discussing the regulation of industry players is something the United States is not ready to do,” the French digital ministry representative said, adding that “in Europe, we will conclude that regulation is necessary, and we will take the extra step that …

Trump scraps signing of landmark executive order regulating AI

Trump scraps signing of landmark executive order regulating AI

President Donald Trump abruptly delayed the signing of a landmark executive order on AI on Thursday afternoon, telling reporters that he had pulled the order at the last minute because it could interfere with American competitiveness on AI. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. “We’re leading China, we’re leading everybody, and I don’t want to do anything that’s going to get in the way of that lead,” Trump, answering reporters’ questions in the Oval Office during an unrelated event, said about America’s AI industry. “I really thought [the order] could have been a blocker.” The order, reportedly in development for weeks, was expected to direct federal agencies to shore up key cybersecurity defenses and work with the world’s leading AI companies on a voluntary basis to test advanced models before they are available to the public, according to two people familiar with the draft. The order’s planned debut would have come less than two months after AI company Anthropic’s Mythos Preview model demonstrated the novel ability …

Iowa Senate passes bill regulating and taxing fast growing prediction markets

Iowa Senate passes bill regulating and taxing fast growing prediction markets

The Iowa Senate has signed off on a bill that would bring new rules and taxes to a fast-expanding corner of finance often called prediction markets. Lawmakers approved Senate File 2470 on Tuesday (March 31), making it the first time a state legislative chamber has moved to formally regulate this type of trading. The proposal lays out a structure for companies offering what it calls event-driven contracts. These are financial products that pay out based on whether a specific future event happens or not. The bill spells out a wide range of qualifying events, including sports contests, lotteries, elections, legislative decisions, and key economic data points. NEW: Iowa Senate passes bill regulating #PredictionMarkets, adding taxes and permits. The measure now moves to the House for debate. @RWW pic.twitter.com/wC4sotj63C — Suswati Basu (@suswatibasu) April 1, 2026 Under the measure, companies would need a state-issued permit before operating in Iowa. That entry comes at a steep cost, with an initial fee set at $20 million and annual renewals priced at $100,000. Prediction markets to face new taxes …

Virginia House advances bill regulating skill games machines across state

Virginia House advances bill regulating skill games machines across state

Virginia lawmakers moved a step closer to setting firm rules for skill game machines on Tuesday (March 3), as the House of Delegates approved legislation designed to regulate and tax the devices that have quietly spread through convenience stores and small retailers. Delegates signed off on Senate Bill 661 in a 57–39 vote, with one member abstaining. Because the House adopted a substitute version of the proposal, the measure now returns to the Senate for another review before it can head to the governor. Virginia House passes SB661 regulating skill game machines, 57–39 with substitute. Bill now returns to Senate for approval of House changes. @RWW pic.twitter.com/fDvZUuD4I8 — Suswati Basu (@suswatibasu) March 3, 2026 Lawmakers have branded the proposal the Virginia Small Business Economic Development Act. The bill would formally authorize skill game machines and place them under a statewide regulatory structure. Supporters argue the devices are already widely available and that the state should impose clear rules rather than continue a cycle of shifting enforcement and legal uncertainty. How the Virginia skill games bill …

Federal judge blocks Tennessee from regulating Kalshi prediction market sports contracts

Federal judge blocks Tennessee from regulating Kalshi prediction market sports contracts

A federal judge in Nashville has stepped in to stop Tennessee regulators from going after prediction market company Kalshi, at least for now, intensifying a broader clash over who gets to police this emerging corner of the betting world. In a 25-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Aleta A. Trauger said Kalshi is likely to win its argument that federal law overrides Tennessee’s attempt to treat its sports event contracts as illegal gambling. She issued a preliminary injunction blocking state officials from enforcing a cease-and-desist letter, though she dismissed the Tennessee Sports Wagering Council itself from the lawsuit on sovereign immunity grounds. Kalshi's losing streak vs. states (MD, MA & NV) comes to an end in Tennessee, as federal district judge grants Kalshi's motion for preliminary injunction vs. Tennessee. Court finds that sports contracts are "swaps." pic.twitter.com/gOiiRIb98z — Daniel Wallach (@WALLACHLEGAL) February 20, 2026 The fight started in early January, when state regulators sent Kalshi a cease-and-desist letter accusing the company of running unlicensed sports betting. Officials demanded that the platform stop offering sports event contracts …

Regulating sexual content online has always been a challenge – how we got here

Regulating sexual content online has always been a challenge – how we got here

When Tim Berners-Lee invented the world wide web, he articulated his dream for the internet to unlock creativity and collaboration on a global scale. But he also wondered “whether it will be a technical dream or a legal nightmare”. History has answered that question with a troubling “both”. The 2003 Broadway musical Avenue Q brilliantly captured this duality. A puppet singing about the internet cheerfully begins the chorus “the internet is really, really good …” only to be cut off by another puppet who adds “… for porn!” The song illustrates an enduring truth: every new technological network has, ultimately, been used for legal, criminal and should-be-criminal sexual activity. In the 1980s, even the French government-backed pre-internet network Minitel was taken over by what one publisher described as a “plague” – a “new genre of difficult-to-detect, mostly sexually linked crimes”. This included murders, kidnaps and the “leasing” of children for sexual purposes. The internet, social media and now large language models are “really, really good” in many ways – but they all suffer from the …