TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis this week said the state will proceed with its proposed AI Bill of Rights despite President Donald Trump’s recent executive order seeking to limit state AI regulation. DeSantis told reporters Monday his proposals comply with the law and argued an executive order cannot preempt states; the order empowers Attorney General Pam Bondi to sue and links noncompliant state laws to potential federal funding losses. DeSantis also urged lawmakers to limit AI uses and proposed toll relief for residents. Officials scheduled a Highlands County news conference Thursday. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 5 original reports from Raw Story, DNyuz, Spectrum News Bay News 9, WKMG and Curated - BLOX Digital Content Exchange.
Florida residents could gain from proposed toll relief and state-specific AI protections; vendors offering AI compliance solutions may find new business opportunities in state markets.
Nonresident drivers could incur higher toll costs, and states that enact divergent AI rules may face federal legal challenges or potential funding penalties.
After reading and researching latest news.... Florida will move forward with an AI Bill of Rights while the Trump administration’s executive order seeks to limit state regulation; legal disputes and funding threats may follow. State officials cite constitutional limits on executive preemption; litigation and federal legislation remain possible over time.
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Florida advances AI rules despite Trump's federal order
Raw Story DNyuz Spectrum News Bay News 9 Spectrum News Bay News 9 WKMGFlorida can regulate AI despite Trump's order, DeSantis says
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