As introduced: - Creates the Artificial Intelligence Bill of Rights, which requires automated systems to undergo pre-deployment testing, risk identification, and mitigation. - Prohibits discrimination by an algorithm. Requires an independent algorithmic impact assessment. - Requires design choices that include privacy protections by default. - Prohibits automated systems from employing user experience or design decisions that obscure user choice. Requires consent request to be simple. - Prohibits unchecked surveillance. Prohibits continuous surveillance and monitoring in education, work, or housing. - Requires notice to when an automated system is being used and an opt out in favor of a human alternative. - Requires automated systems used in sensitive domains, like criminal justice, employment, education, and health, must be tailored to their purpose, provide meaningful access for oversight, include training for New York residents, and incorporate human consideration for adverse or high-risk decisions.
| Date | Chamber | Action |
|---|---|---|
Jan 7, 2026 | — | referred to science and technology |
Jan 27, 2025 | — | referred to science and technology |
| Last Action | Jan 7, 2026 |
| Year | 2025 |
| Bill Type | Bill |
| Created | Jan 28, 2025 |
| Updated | Jan 28, 2025 |