The Federal Trade Commission is signaling it has little desire to regulate artificial intelligence.
The commission’s director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection, Chris Mufarrige, said Tuesday, “there’s no appetite for anything AI-related,” in the agency’s rulemaking pipeline.
“When it comes to other rules, stay tuned. I think we’ve got ideas,” he told attendees in Washington DC during the Privacy State of the Union, a conference organized by Kelley Drye & Warren LLP, Ketch, Red Clover Advisors, and WISP.
The FTC in December reopened and set aside a 2024 consent order banning artificial intelligence writing assistant Rytr from providing AI-enabled ...
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.
