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AI State Regulatory Frontiers: Inside the New Wave of State AI Laws

By Ashley L. Taylor, Jr., Ghillaine Reid, David Stauss & Matthew Berns on May 5, 2026
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In this episode of Regulatory Oversight, host Ashley Taylor continues the multipart series on artificial intelligence with colleagues Ghillaine Reid, David Stauss, and Matt Berns for a practical look at how states are actually regulating AI in 2025-26. Framed through a consumer protection lens, the discussion moves beyond theoretical federal proposals to real bills and regulations moving through state legislatures today.

https://regulatory-oversight-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes/ai-state-regulatory-frontiers-inside-the-new-wave-of-state-ai-laws

David surveys the national landscape, noting that nearly all state legislatures are active and that roughly 500 AI-related bills have been introduced, with major themes around pricing rules, consumer-facing interactive AI, health-related AI, provenance requirements, and the Colorado AI Act. Matt then focuses on the rapid growth of algorithmic pricing laws — 2025 statutes in Connecticut, New York, and California restricting the use of competitors’ data and requiring disclosure of personalized or “surveillance” pricing, as well as 2026 proposals in states like Maryland, New Jersey, and California that increasingly target personalized pricing in groceries and other essential sectors. Ghillaine turns to transparency in synthetic content, contrasting New York’s broad but stalled GenAI warning bill with its more precise “synthetic performers” law and tying those developments to California’s AI Transparency Act (SB 942), which requires watermarking and detection tools for large generative AI platforms.

The conversation rounds out with an overview of new state rules on chatbots and “companion AI,” particularly in California, New York, and other states, describing requirements to clearly disclose when users — especially minors — are interacting with AI, protocols for handling suicidal ideation, and growing concerns over mental health use cases and broad private rights of action.


Transcript: AI State Regulatory Frontiers: Inside the New Wave of State AI Laws (PDF)

Photo of Ashley L. Taylor, Jr. Ashley L. Taylor, Jr.

Ashley specializes in regulatory and enforcement matters involving the state Attorneys General, CFPB and FTC.

Read more about Ashley L. Taylor, Jr.Ashley L.'s Linkedin Profile
Photo of Ghillaine Reid Ghillaine Reid

Ghillaine co-leads the securities investigations and enforcement practice at Troutman Pepper. She focuses her practice on government and securities regulatory investigations, financial services litigation, commercial litigation and corporate compliance.

Read more about Ghillaine Reid
Photo of David Stauss David Stauss

David guides clients as they navigate the complexities of privacy and cyber law. His straightforward advice and thorough approach are a benefit to clients as they confront their toughest challenges.

Read more about David StaussDavid's Linkedin Profile
Photo of Matthew Berns Matthew Berns

Drawing on his experience in senior leadership roles in the New Jersey Attorney General’s and Governor’s Offices and as a trial attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, Matt provides an insider’s perspective when guiding clients through complex government investigations, litigation, and other…

Drawing on his experience in senior leadership roles in the New Jersey Attorney General’s and Governor’s Offices and as a trial attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, Matt provides an insider’s perspective when guiding clients through complex government investigations, litigation, and other actions.

Read more about Matthew Berns
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  • Posted in:
    Civil Litigation, Corporate Compliance
  • Blog:
    Regulatory Oversight
  • Organization:
    Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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