Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SB 1047, from state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), is set to go to the state Assembly floor later this month. If it passes the Legislature, Gov. Gavin Newsom will have to decide whether to ...
On May 21, SB 1047 passed the Senate 32-1. [32] [33] The bill was significantly amended by Wiener on August 15, 2024 in response to industry advice. [34] Amendments included adding clarifications, and removing the creation of a "Frontier Model Division" and the penalty of perjury. [35] [36] On August 28, the bill passed the State Assembly 48-16.
Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed California's controversial AI bill, SB 1047, ... Although the bill passed the state's Assembly 48-16 (seven Democrats voted no) and Senate 30-9 (one Democrat voted no ...
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sunday vetoed SB 1047, an artificial intelligence safety bill that would have established requirements for developers of advanced AI models to create protocols aimed at ...
The bill, known as SB 1047, would have required companies building large-scale AI models—meaning those that cost more than $100 million to train—to run safety tests on those systems and take ...
The Center for AI Safety Action Fund is a sponsor of the California bill SB 1047, the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act. [13] In 2023, the cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which went bankrupt in November 2022, attempted to recoup $6.5 million that it had donated to CAIS earlier that year. [14] [15]
This week is the final deadline for California's landmark SB 1047 bill to pass, which would codify the first safety guardrails on AI on U.S. statute books. ... (Senate Bill 1047). Should it pass ...
SB 1047 passed the Senate 32-1, then was amended. It then passed the Assembly 48-16, but had to go back to the Senate due to the amendments, passing again 29-9. Should this timeline be present in the infobox, or in the text somewhere? (the article now doesn't mention the original 32-1 vote) Solomon1320 00:22, 30 August 2024 (UTC)