California’s new AI safety law shows regulation and innovation don’t have to clash 

ICT, Most Popular, Trends News

No Comments

Photo of author

By Dipa Biswash

WhatsApp Group Join Now
Telegram Group Join Now


SB 53, AI Protection and Transparency Bill, which California Governor Gavin News has signed the law this week, is evidence that state control AI should not be prevented from progress.

So in today’s episode of Equity, the Youth Advocacy Group Encode AI Vice President Adam Billen said.

Bileen told TechCrunch, “The reality is that the policy makers themselves know that we have to do something and they work on a million other issues that there is a way to pass the law that protects the true innovation – which I care – while ensuring that these products are safe,” Bilen tells TechCrunch.

In the main part, SB 53 is a first-domestic bill that needs large AI labs to be transparent about their protection and protection protocols-especially how they prevent their models from catastrophic risk, such as to make cyberpets in critical infrastructure or create bio-wowns. The law also commands that companies are sticking to those protocols, which will be applied by the emergency service office.

“The companies have already asked them to do the things they have asked to do in this bill,” Bileen told TechCrunch. ” “They test the protection in their models they publish the model cards. They have begun to start shaking in some cases in some organizations? Yes and that’s why these national bills are important.”

Bilen also mentions that some AI companies have a policy around the surrender of security under competitive pressure. For example, Openi has publicly stated that if a rival AI lab publishes a high-risky system without similar protection, it can “adjust” its protection requirements. Billen argued that policies prevent the reasons of competitive or financial stress, can apply the existing security promises of companies.

Although the public opposition to SB 53 was mute compared to his predecessor SB 1047, the News vetoed last year, the speech between Silicon Valley and most AI labs was that almost any AI control progress would be prevented in the US to defeat China to defeat China.

TechCrunch event

San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025

This is why strong people like Meta, Andresen Horovits and OpenAI President Greg Broken are collectively pumping millions of II-pro-politicians in the super PAC in the state elections. And that is why the same force pressed for an AI suspension earlier this year that forbids the AI ​​control for 10 years.

The Encode AI proposal launched a coalition of more than 200 companies to work for the attack, but Billen said the fight was not over. Senator Ted Cruise, who championed the suspension, is trying a new strategy to achieve the same goal of the federal premises of state laws. In September, the cruise introduces Sandbox lawWhich will allow AI companies to temporarily applied for the waiver to bypass some federal rules temporarily up to 10 years. Bilen also expects an upcoming bill to establish a Federal AI standard that will be created as a mid-place solution, but in reality the state laws will override.

He cautioned that the Federal AI Act narrowly “can erase federalism for the most important technology of our time.”

Bilen said, “If you tell me SB 53 that bill that will replace all the state bills with AI and all potential risks, I will tell you that this is probably not a very good idea and this bill is designed for a specific subset,” said Bilen.

Adam Billen, Vice President of Public Policy, Encode AIFigure Credit:Encode AI

Although he agrees that AI race issues with China need to be implemented in Matters, and policymakers, which will support American progress, he says that the killing of state bills – which basically focus on dipfakes, transparency, algorithmical discrimination, protection of children and the official use of AI – is not a way to do this.

“What are the bills like SB 53 that will stop us from beating China? No,” he said. “I think it’s really Buddhistly dishonest to say that it is the thing that will stop our competition.”

He further added: “If the thing you take care of if the thing you care is to beat China in the competition – and I care about it – the things you press for are staff as the export control of the Congress,” said Bilen. “You will make sure that American companies have chips. But the industry is not pressing it.”

Like legal proposal Chip protection law Export control and tracking devices try to prevent the evolution of advanced AI chips in China and existing chips and science laws try to increase domestic chip production. However, some of the major technology companies, including OpenAI and Nvidia, have expressed disrespect or opposition to some aspects of this effort, refer to concern about EffectivenessThe weakness of competition and protection.

Nvidia has reasons – it has a strong financial enthusiasm for China to continue to sell chips, which contains Ically tihassically Represents a significant part of its global income. Billen assumed that the open suppliers like Open Nvidia could hold the chip export advocacy to stay in good grades.

There is also an inconsistent message from the Trump administration. Three months after the export of export ban on advanced AI chips in China in April 2021, the administration reversed the course, allowing China to sell some chips in exchange for 5% of the income.

Bilen said, “You see that people in the mountains are moving towards bills like the Chip Protection Act that controls export to China,” said Bileen. “In the meantime, this proposal of the narrative will continue to kill the state bills that are actually light strong.”

Billen added that SB 53 is an example of the activities of democracy – art and policy makers get a version of a bill to work together that everyone may agree. This is “extremely ugly and messy” but “this process of democracy and federalism is the full basis of our country and our economic system and I hope we will continue it successfully.”

“I think SB 53 is one of the best proof points that can still work,” he said.

Leave a Comment