Blog

  • Lawmakers make no revisions to artificial intelligence law | Colorado

    Lawmakers make no revisions to artificial intelligence law | Colorado

    Editor’s note: This story was updated late Monday afternoon with a statement from Gov. Jared Polis’ office.

    (The Center Square) – The Colorado General Assembly wrapped up its legislative session last week without any revisions to its artificial intelligence law, which takes effect early next year.

    Colorado lawmakers passed landmark AI regulation legislation in 2024. Supporters said the law will protect consumers, but critics argue it will be bad for business and innovation.

    Senate Bill 24-205 put in place requirements for AI developers protecting consumers against “algorithmic discrimination” and added risk management, impact assessments and reviews for AI developers. 

    Gov. Jared Polis last year signed the bill, which takes effect on Feb. 1, 2026, but expressed concern “about the impact this law may have on an industry that is fueling critical technological advancements across our state for consumers and enterprises alike.”

    A last-minute effort to amend the law during the legislative session that ended last week was found in Senate Bill 25-318, but the bill died on the calendar despite pressure from the governor and other officials to delay SB 24-205’s implementation. The General Assembly adjourned Wednesday.

    “The stakeholder collaboration that took place over many months leading up to and during the 2025 legislative session brought many ideas, concerns, and priorities to the table from a wide range of communities,” said a letter sent to lawmakers one week ago. “However, with just hours remaining in the 2025 legislative session, it is clear that more time is needed to continue important stakeholder work to ensure that Colorado’s artificial intelligence regulatory law is effective and implementable.”

    The letter was signed by Polis, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston, Attorney General Phil Weiser, U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, and U.S. Reps. Joe Neguse and Brittany Pettersen.

    “Together, we implore leadership and members of the Colorado General Assembly to take action now to delay implementation of SB 24-205 until January 2027,” the letter added. “Colorado communities in every corner of our state deserve the benefit of well-crafted artificial intelligence consumer protection law that more time for stakeholder engagement and policy development work will bring.”

    Democratic Senate Majority Leader Robert Rodriguez, the sponsor of SB 24-205 and SB 25-318, told reporters after the session he will work with AI stakeholders in the coming weeks, KUNC reported

    “We will get working, and whether we go into special session or go into next year, we’ll be in a much better place with the policy and have more consensus,” Rodriguez said, according to KUNC.

    Shelby Wieman, Polis’ press secretary, told The Center Square late Monday afternoon, “The Governor has been clear – both in the letter he signed with Majority Leader Rodriguez and Attorney General Phil Weiser, and throughout this session – that key changes needed to be made to the law created by SB24-205.

    “There is broad support for ensuring that Colorado continues to lead in technology innovation while still pioneering critical consumer protections,” Wieman said in an emailed statement. “Unfortunately, the legislature failed to take meaningful action this session to address the shared principles articulated before the session, nor did they delay implementation to allow more time to plan and work on this, despite strong support from small businesses, school districts, institutions of higher education, hospitals, and other key stakeholders.

    “That’s why before the bill died, the Governor joined with AG Weiser, Mayor Johnston, and members of the Congressional Delegation to call for the legislature to take action in the final hours of session,” Wieman said. “This will need to be addressed, and a special session is one such venue where it could be addressed.”

     In Colorado, special sessions are covened by the governor.

  • When the Government Should Say ‘No’ to an AI Use Case

    When the Government Should Say ‘No’ to an AI Use Case

    States across the nation are creating “sandboxes” and otherwise encouraging experimentation with AI that enables more effective and efficient operations. Call it, perhaps, AI with a purpose. But advancing innovation in government comes with risk.

    In Colorado, CIO David Edinger said his office has so far reviewed about 120 ideas for potential uses of AI in state government. Below, he explains how they vet agency proposals to use AI. For ideas classified as “high” risk under the NIST framework, most of the ones they reject have something in common: data practices that don’t meet the state’s data privacy requirements.

    Colorado is not alone in keeping the data practices of potential AI partners at the forefront of its decision-making.

    In a conversation with Government Technology at last month’s National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) Midyear Conference, California Chief Technology Officer Jonathan Porat explained that there are three main components to how the state evaluates prospective use cases of artificial intelligence. Aside from the appropriateness of the use case itself for state government, officials also consider the track record of the technology itself. Thirdly, they dig into the data involved in the proposal.

    “Are the data that we’re using appropriate for a GenAI system?” Porat said. “Are they properly being governed and secure?”

    Video transcript: I would say we’ve reviewed maybe 120 proposals so far across every agency for all possible uses and we follow the NIST framework for that. So it’s medium, high or prohibited. If it’s prohibited, we prohibit it. If it’s medium, we just deploy it. If it’s high, we evaluate it more thoroughly. And when we do evaluate it and we say no, it’s almost always not because of how it was intended to be used, but because of data sharing and what data we’re then sharing with whoever that provider is per their standard contract that we can’t usually by state law share. So it’s PII or HIPAA or CJIS or something like that and we have to say it’s not because of how you want to use the tool, it’s because you’re giving away the data in a way that we can’t accept. And that’s really the crux of it and that was another surprise was it’s not how people are trying to use it. It’s what’s going on with the privacy of the data.

    Noelle Knell is the executive editor for e.Republic, responsible for setting the overall direction for e.Republic’s editorial platforms, including Government Technology, Governing, Industry Insider, Emergency Management and the Center for Digital Education. She has been with e.Republic since 2011, and has decades of writing, editing and leadership experience. A California native, Noelle has worked in both state and local government, and is a graduate of the University of California, Davis, with majors in political science and American history.

    Nikki Davidson is a data reporter for Government Technology. She’s covered government and technology news as a video, newspaper, magazine and digital journalist for media outlets across the country. She’s based in Monterey, Calif.

  • Tom Brady feels uncomfortable choosing between Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in GOAT debate

    Tom Brady feels uncomfortable choosing between Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in GOAT debate

    Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo, who’s better? This debate has been going on for years, with fans from both superstars getting into heated arguments about the reasons why their f
  • With trust in AI flagging, senators want Commerce to lead education campaign

    With trust in AI flagging, senators want Commerce to lead education campaign

    As the internet becomes overrun with AI slop and public trust in artificial intelligence plummets, a bipartisan group of senators want to enlist the Commerce Department in an education operation about the emerging technology.

    The Artificial Intelligence Public Awareness and Education Campaign Act would require the Commerce secretary to oversee an initiative to provide Americans with information about the benefits of AI in their daily lives, as well as the risks the technology presents.

    “With the rapid increase of AI in our society, it is important that individuals can both clearly recognize the technology and understand how to maximize the use of it in their daily lives,” Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind., a co-sponsor of the bill, said in a statement. “The Artificial Intelligence Public Awareness and Education Campaign Act is an important step in ensuring all Americans can benefit from the opportunities created by AI.”

    The campaign would detail the ubiquity of AI in everyday life and highlight its benefits, including for small business owners and in workforce opportunities with the federal government. It would also note the different ways in which various regions, economies and subpopulations may interact with the technology, while making clear “the rights of an individual under law with respect” to AI.

    “America has the opportunity to embrace artificial intelligence and all of the benefits it can bring to numerous industries — health care, business and national security to name a few,” Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., another co-sponsor, said in a statement. “Consumer literacy and education is a critical piece of keeping the United States ahead of the curve on artificial intelligence development and adoption.”

    Another co-sponsor, Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, said the legislation is “essential” for helping the public understand the risks and benefits associated with AI. The lawmakers call for the campaign to include best practices for “detecting and differentiating AI-generated media,” including deepfakes and content produced by chatbots.

    “Our bill will direct the Commerce Department to educate the public about how best to take advantage of these tools while staying vigilant to AI-enabled scams and fraud,” Schatz said in a statement.

    On AI, House GOP wants more money for Congress, less say for states

    The introduction of the legislation last week came days before House Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans unveiled a reconciliation bill Sunday night that would provide the Commerce Department with $500 million for an artificial intelligence and information technology modernization initiative.

    Those funds, per the bill, would be available to Commerce until Sept. 30, 2035, to “modernize and secure Federal information technology systems through the deployment of commercial artificial intelligence, the deployment of automation technologies, and the replacement of antiquated systems.” 

    Also included in Republicans’ proposal is a provision that would ban state laws or other regulations on AI models, systems or related automated systems. Grace Gedye, policy analyst for AI issues at Consumer Reports, said in a statement that Congress has “long abdicated” its responsibilities on AI regulation, and barring states from “taking actions to protect their residents” is not the answer.

    “This incredibly broad preemption would prevent states from taking action to deal with all sorts of harms,” Gedye said, “from non-consensual intimate AI images, audio, and video, to AI-driven threats to critical infrastructure or market manipulation, to protecting AI whistleblowers, to assessing high-risk AI decision-making systems for bias or other errors, to simply requiring AI chatbots to disclose that they aren’t human.”

    AI regulations have been passed into law in several states over the past decade, sparking criticism from major AI companies for what they say is a patchwork system that stifles innovation. Americans for Responsible Innovation President Brad Carson said in a statement that “tying the hands” of state lawmakers on AI could have “catastrophic consequences” for the public and small businesses.

    “Lawmakers stalled on social media safeguards for a decade and we are still dealing with the fallout. Now apply those same harms to technology moving as fast as AI,” Carson said. “Without first passing significant federal rules for AI, banning state lawmakers from taking action just doesn’t make sense. Ultimately, the move to ban AI safeguards is a giveaway to Big Tech that will come back to bite us.”

    Written by Matt Bracken

    Matt Bracken is the managing editor of FedScoop and CyberScoop, overseeing coverage of federal government technology policy and cybersecurity.

    Before joining Scoop News Group in 2023, Matt was a senior editor at Morning Consult, leading data-driven coverage of tech, finance, health and energy. He previously worked in various editorial roles at The Baltimore Sun and the Arizona Daily Star.

    You can reach him at matt.bracken@scoopnewsgroup.com.

  • What Al-Nassr Fans Are Saying About Cristiano Ronaldo After 9-0 Win

    What Al-Nassr Fans Are Saying About Cristiano Ronaldo After 9-0 Win

    Al-Nassr fans have all come to the same conclusion about Cristiano Ronaldo following their historic 9-0 victory over Al-Akhdoud on Monday night. The Saudi Arabian giants have endured yet another disappointing campaign and, with three games left of the domestic season, have no chance of winning the Saudi Pro League title as they sit 11 points behind top spot in third.

    It means yet another term without silverware for Ronaldo, who joined the club following the 2022 World Cup after his contract with Manchester United was terminated. And amid suggestions that he may not be signed to a new deal by the club, the fans have given their verdict after he missed out on the record-breaking performance.

    Related


    Cristiano Ronaldo Labelled a ‘Crybaby’ For Actions During Al-Nassr Defeat

    Fans have turned on the star following his latest meltdown

    Al-Nassr Fans Convinced They Are Better Without Ronaldo

    Sadio Mane was the star of the show in the 40-year-old’s absence

    Cristiano Ronaldo

    Ronaldo was absent from the squad as his side travelled to Najran to face off against the team currently sitting second from bottom in the Saudi Pro League table. However, it made little to no difference, as the visitors cruised to one of the most dominant victories in Saudi football history.

    Former Liverpool star Sadio Mane was the hero of the hour, grabbing four goals, while ex-Aston Villa starlet Jhon Duran also notched a brace. As a result of the fabulous display, fans have now become convinced that the five-time Ballon d’Or winner is holding back Stefano Pioli’s men.

    “Our biggest win of the season and Cristiano Ronaldo isn’t playing. He makes us WORSE. Get CR7 out of my Al Nassr,” wrote one fan on social media, while another added: “Al Nassr without Ronaldo is actually insane.”

    A third stated: “Al Nassr won 9-0 without Ronaldo. Tells a lot,” while a fourth reacted by saying: “It’s so clear that Portugal & Al Nassr are better without Ronaldo man… shame on him!”

    A fifth pointed to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s candid admission that bringing Cristiano Ronaldo back to Manchester United was a mistake, citing it as further proof that the forward’s decline—and the disruptive effect it can have on a team—has been evident for some time: “Ole Solskjaer admitted in a podcast on Stick to Football that he regrets signing Ronaldo. That brudda disrupts teams and doesn’t wanna admit his glory days has passed. Al Nassr has just won 9-0. They play so well without him and win every game without him with ease.”

    Related


    Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo’s Stats at Inter Miami & Al-Nassr After 50 Games Compared

    The two men have both been impressive for their new clubs, but looking at the statistics from their first 50 games, one had a better start

    All statistics courtesy of Transfermarkt – accurate as of 12/05/2025.

  • Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    • Al-Nassr thrash Al-Akhdoud in 9-0 win
    • Mane scores four goals with first SPL hat-trick
    • Ronaldo misses out on goalfest as he remains benched
  • Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    • Al-Nassr thrash Al-Akhdoud in 9-0 win
    • Mane scores four goals with first SPL hat-trick
    • Ronaldo misses out on goalfest as he remains benched
  • Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Are Al-Nassr better without Cristiano Ronaldo?! Sadio Mane scores four against 10-man Al-Akhdoud as CR7’s side record their biggest EVER win in his absence with 9-0 thumping

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    Article continues below

    • Al-Nassr thrash Al-Akhdoud in 9-0 win
    • Mane scores four goals with first SPL hat-trick
    • Ronaldo misses out on goalfest as he remains benched
  • Without Ronaldo in squad, Al Nassr smashes Al Akhdoud in Saudi Pro League to break club record for biggest win

    Without Ronaldo in squad, Al Nassr smashes Al Akhdoud in Saudi Pro League to break club record for biggest win

    With the services of Cristiano Ronaldo not available, Al Nassr comfortably defeated Al Akhdoud 9-0 in the Saudi Pro League on Monday at the Prince Hathloul bin Abdulaziz Sports City stadium.

    Already out of title contention, this victory helped Al Nassr climb to third place and reach 63 points from 31 matches in the league.

    This was also the side’s biggest win in the club’s history. The previous record stood at Nassr’s 8-0 win against Abha Club away from home last season in the league.

    AS IT HAPPENED | Al Akhdoud vs Al Nassr

    Earlier, skipper Ronaldo was not named in Al Nassr’s matchday squad for this fixture. Media reports suggest that head coach Stefano Pioli possibly kept the Portuguese forward out of the squad because of physical exhaustion. Regardless, the Riyadh-based side didn’t miss the 40-year-old.

    The match was already out of the host’s reach after Nassr was leading four goals to nil at half-time. Jhon Duran scored a brace as Sadio Mane netted four. Ayman Yahya, Marcelo Brozovic, Mohammed Maran also got on the scoresheet.

    Yahya broke the deadlock in the 16th minute before Duran and Brozovic gave the visitor a three-goal cushion within the first 30 minutes. Mane scored his first of the night when he converted from the penalty spot in first half’s stoppage time.

    Soon after the break, Duran scored his second as Mane struck three goals in the span of 15 minutes. Maran added to Akhdoud’s misery after he converted a penalty for Nassr’s ninth goal of the match.

  • Pope Leo XIV’s name choice and facing the world of artificial intelligence

    Pope Leo XIV’s name choice and facing the world of artificial intelligence

    Among the reasons Pope Leo XIV gave for selecting the name he did was his desire to address the pressing human questions raised by artificial intelligence—just as his namesake and forerunner Pope Leo XII courageously and profoundly addressed the challenges of the Industrial Revolution. One such question is what A.I. does to our ability to communicate. As we rush to acquire a host of personal A.I. assistants that are designed to speak for us, we might pause and consider: What makes it so difficult for us to speak?

    It turns out that the one thing we need help with is the one thing these assistants, by their very design, cannot help us with.

    Though it may seem obvious when we consider human perception that we look out at the world and simply report what we see, there may be more than meets the eye. The philosopher Martin Heidegger said something peculiar about language: “We do not say what we see, but rather the reverse, we see what one says about the matter.”

    So, for example, one says, “Majoring in philosophy is impractical,” or, along the same lines, “Poetry is useless.” By virtue of these routine phrases, we are primed to see only the supposed lack of utility. We might notice that philosophy majors do not qualify for high-paying jobs as petroleum engineers, but we simply cannot register the fact that philosophy majors end up making more money over the long term than such practical majors as biology and business.

    Who is the “one” that scripts our speech for us? The one is each of us when we speak habitually without due consideration. We express what the philosopher Edmund Husserl called “sedimented” judgments, ones that are carried to us downstream from past occasions of thought but without having the full force of present insight behind them. Like the children’s game of telephone, much can be lost in the transmission.

    Coding what one says

    ChatGPT, we can see, gives voice to what one says. It generates new speech exclusively on the basis of having digitally analyzed 45 terabytes of text concerning what human beings have said previously. The averaged-out result is the voice of the one. The computer scientist Stephen Wolfram writes that “What ChatGPT is always fundamentally trying to do is to produce a ‘reasonable continuation’ of whatever text it’s got so far, where by ‘reasonable’ we mean ‘what one might expect someone to write after seeing what people have written on billions of webpages, etc.’”

    If we look under the hood of ChatGPT, we don’t find any texts or knowledge of language. Instead, we find scores and scores of numbers, gleaned from these terabytes of data, that can be used by the system’s neural net to generate, word by word, what we speakers of language can recognize as intelligible prose.

    The computers are blind. The speech they generate is not nourished by fresh experience or thoughtfulness. Instead, their prose is parasitic on the experience and intelligence that people have brought to speech. And they have been trained by human teachers to refine their algorithm so that instead of regurgitating nonsense echoed from the human conversation, they are able to regurgitate something that sounds sensible and appropriate.

    Hence, these systems originate in a version of what one says, namely a mathematical representation of what has previously been said, and the output is measured by our native sense of what one might say.

    Saying what we see

    Though we often thoughtlessly repeat whatever one says and notice only whatever one happens to notice, we humans are free to do otherwise. There remains the possibility that experience will nudge us to grasp a little more of the truth, and thereby to bring to speech a little more of what can and should be said. There remains the possibility that we might invest ourselves a little more carefully and thoughtfully in considering the topic at hand.

    In Phenomenology of the Human Person, Robert Sokolowski calls attention to how we use speech to take ownership of what is said. When we say, with meaning, “I think that such and such is the case,” we put our own credibility on the line and indicate that we have taken all reasonable precautions to ascertain the truth. When a chatbot uses the pronoun, I,by contrast, there is no self, no responsible person coming through. There is no “agent of truth,” to use Sokolowski’s term.

    We might rattle off “Poetry is useless” as what one says about poetry, but we should pause before saying, “I think that poetry is useless.” That phrase carries with it the burden of having actually considered the matter, at least for a moment, and with that consideration comes the possibility of disconfirming what one says. “Hmm. Consider ‘The Iliad’ and the Psalms, and how the spiritedness of Achilles and the jubilation of David have buoyed the spirits of countless people. Poetry may be among the most beneficial of things for human life.”

    The fact that A.I. systems are so good at generating text that sounds like human speech can lead us to believe that we are dealing with an individual who is responsible for what is said. But in fact these machines are expert only at echoing back to us what others typically say. The question of truth makes this deficient character plain. The machines, we say, “hallucinate” when they start fabricating truth. But there is no normative dimension to their processes. They follow rules mechanically. They cannot care for truth as we do; they are indifferent to the distinction between truth and falsity except insofar as the terms affect the way we measure their outcomes.

    They cannot turn and face the truth or culpably fail to face the facts, not for the trivial reason that they do not have faces, but for the profound reason that they can only do what they in fact do; there is no striving to reach a measure they can fail to reach. They don’t hunger for truth or hanker after the good. We are dealing with creatures that simulate our behaviors rather than duplicating our powers of intellect and of will.

    Five ways to live with A.I.

    In The Language Animal, Charles Taylor details the central role of speech in human life: We are the animal that speaks and harkens to the voices of others. Yet today, our natural habitat is threatened. The dialogical character of speech is being replaced by an ever-louder monologue in which we are cast in the role of mere auditors for what “one says.”

    Now, the switch from what one says to what I think is not automatic but requires effort. Instead of just following the ruts in the wagon trail, the way of least resistance, we have to goad ourselves to blaze a better path if necessary. And it is precisely that additional effort that might induce us to look for shortcuts provided by our growing legion of digital assistants.

    In light of this situation, Rainer Maria Rilke’s advice to a young writer is particularly germane: “Go into yourself. Examine the reason that bids you to write; check whether it reaches its roots into the deepest regions of your heart, admit to yourself whether you would die if it should be denied you to write.…Then, approach nature. Then try, like the first human being, to say what you see and experience and love and lose.”

    Following Rilke, here are five tips to help each of us realize our human vocation to say what we see instead of what one says.

    First, humanize but anonymize the machine. The voice of a digital assistant is nothing more than an algorithmically averaged presentation of the millions of writers that composed the texts on which the assistant was trained. Its voice is at once that of many and of none. Each of us must therefore challenge its authority by returning its anonymous judgments to the truth of the matter.

    Second, sink your words down into the soil of living experience. Talk face to face with others whenever possible, making a point to look into the eyes of your interlocutor and then to look with your interlocutor towards the things you are talking about, so that your speech might take its bearings from your joint experience of the things themselves. Be ready and willing to tarry with the real; impatience breeds superficiality.

    Third, be mindful of lips and hands. Speech, whether spoken or written, is always the work of one’s own bodily agency. Handwritten notes express one’s thoughts so much more authentically and personally; the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein even said he thought with his hands rather than his head.

    Fourth, speak off script. Say unexpected things and go out of your way to call attention to what is important and insightful rather than what is expected or typical. Don’t let algorithms write your text, even your pleasantries. Dare to be idiosyncratic and to forge and fashion the human conversation in new ways.

    Fifth, rediscover the wellspring of speech. Poetry is the art of saying things beautifully, and philosophy the art of saying things truthfully. Commit several choice poems to memory, and try your hand at writing some yourself. Read some philosophical prose, and dare to bring to light essential truths in your own voice.

    We endangered language animals know not only what to say but, more importantly, why. Although it takes a modicum of effort, this is nonetheless our birthright and great joy: to articulate truths freshly and compellingly, to invest our plain words with the substance of our intentions and to say all the words that we know really matter.