Terry Gerton Last time we spoke, we were talking about the potential of a patchwork of state laws that might stifle AI innovation. Now we donβt have a federal law, but we have an executive order from the president that creates a federal preemption framework and a task force that will specifically challenge those state laws. Last time we talked, we were worried about constitutionality. What do you think about this new construct?
Kevin Frazier Yeah, so this construct really tries to set forth a path for Congress to step up. I think everyone across the board at the state level in the White House is asking Congress to take action. And this, in many ways, is meant to smooth that path and ease the way forward for Congress to finally set forth a national framework. And by virtue of establishing an AI Litigation Task Force, the president is trying to make sure that Congress has a clear path to move forward. This AI Litigation Task Force is essentially charging the Department of Justice under the Attorney General to challenge state AI laws that may be unconstitutional or otherwise unlawful. Now, critically, this is not saying that states do not have the authority to regulate AI in certain domains, but merely giving and encouraging the AG to have a more focused regulatory agenda, focusing their litigation challenges on state AI laws that may have extra-territorial ramifications, that may violate the First Amendment, other things that the DOJ has always had the authority to do.
Terry Gerton Where do you think, then, that this sets the balance between innovation and state autonomy and federal authority?
Kevin Frazier So the balance is constantly being weighed here, Terry. Iβd say that this is trying to strike a happy middle ground. We see that in the executive order, thereβs explicit recognition that in many ways there may be state laws that actually do empower and encourage innovation. We know that in 2026, weβre going to see Texas, my home state, develop a regulatory sandbox that allows for AI companies to deploy their tools under fewer regulations, but with increased oversight. Utah has explored a similar approach. And so those sorts of state laws that are very much operating within their own borders, that are regulating the end uses of AI, or as specified in the executive order, things like data center locations, things like child safety protections and things like state government use of AI, those are all cordoned off and recognized by the EO as the proper domain of states. And now, the EO is really encouraging Congress to say, look, weβre trying to do our best to make sure that states arenβt regulating things like the frontier of AI, imposing obligations on AI development, but Congress, you need to step up because it is you, after all, that has the authority under the Constitution to regulate interstate commerce.
Terry Gerton Letβs go back to those sandboxes that you talked about, because we talked about those before and you talked about them as a smart way of creating a trial and error space for AI governance. Does this EO then align with those and do you expect more states to move in that direction?
Kevin Frazier Yes, so this EO very much encourages and welcomes state regulations that, again, arenβt running afoul of the Constitution, arenβt otherwise running afoul of federal laws or regulations that may preempt certain regulatory postures by the states. If youβre not doing something unconstitutional, if youβre trying to violate the Supremacy Clause, thereβs a wide range for states to occupy with respect to AI governance. And here, those sorts of sandboxes are the sort of innovation-friendly approaches that I think the White House and members of Congress and many state legislators would like to see spread and continue to be developed. And these are really the sorts of approaches that allow us to get used to and start acclimating to what I like to refer to as boring AI. The fact of the matter is most AI isnβt something thatβs going to threaten humanity. Itβs not something thatβs going to destroy the economy tomorrow, so on and so forth. Most AI, Terry, is really boring. Itβs things like improving our ability to detect diseases, improving our ability to direct the transmission of energy. And these sorts of positive, admittedly boring, uses of AI are the very sorts of things we should be trying to experiment with at the state level.
Terry Gerton Iβm speaking with Dr. Kevin Frazier. He is the AI innovation and law fellow at the University of Texas School of Law. Kevin, one of the other things weβve talked about is that the uncertainty around AI laws and regulations really creates a barrier to entry for innovators or startups or small businesses in the AI space. How do you think the EO affects that concern?
Kevin Frazier So the EO is very attentive to what I would refer to, not only as a patchwork, but increasingly whatβs looking like a Tower of Babel approach that weβre seeing at the state level. So most recently in New York, we saw that the governor signed legislation that looks a lot like SB 53. Now for folks who arenβt spending all of their waking hours thinking about AI, SB 53 was a bill passed in California that regulates the frontier AI companies and imposes various transparency requirements on them. Now, New York in some ways copy and pasted that legislation. Folks may say, oh, this is great, states are trying to copy one another to make sure that there is some sort of harmony with respect to AI regulation. Well, the problem is how states end up interpreting those same provisions, what it means for example, to have a reasonable model or what it means to adhere to certain transparency requirements, that may vary in terms of state-by-state enforcement. And so thatβs really where there is concern among the White House with respect to extra-territorial laws, because if suddenly we see that a AI company in Utah or Texas feels compelled or is compelled to comply with New York laws or California laws, thatβs where we start to see that concern about a patchwork.
Terry Gerton And what does that mean for innovators who may want to scale up? They may get a great start in Utah, for example, but how do they scale up nationwide if there is that patchwork?
Kevin Frazier Terry, this is a really important question because thereβs an argument to be made that bills like SB 53 or the RAISE Act in New York include carve-outs for smaller AI labs. And some folks will say, hey, look, it says if youβre not building a model of this size or with this much money, or if you donβt have this many users, then great, you donβt to comply with this specific regulation. Well, the problem is, Terry, I have yet to meet a startup founder who says, I canβt wait to build this new AI tool, but the second I hit 999,000 users, Iβm just going to stop building. Or the second that I want to build a model thatβs just one order of magnitude more powerful in terms of compute, Iβm just going to turn it off, Iβm going to throw in the towel. And so even when there are carve-outs, we see that startups have to begin to think about when theyβre going to run into those regulatory burdens. And so even with carve-outs applied across the patchwork approach, weβre going to see that startups find it harder and harder to convince venture capitalists, to convince institutions, to bet and gamble on them. And thatβs a real problem if we want to be the leaders in AI innovation.
Terry Gerton So letβs go back then to the DOJβs litigation task force. How might that play into this confusion? Will it clarify it? Will it add more complexity? Whatβs your prognostication?
Kevin Frazier Yes, I always love to prognosticate, and I think that here weβre going to see some positive litigation be brought forward that allows some of these really important, difficult debates to finally be litigated. Thereβs questions about what it means to regulate interstate commerce in the AI domain. We need experts to have honest and frank conversations about this, and litigation can be a very valuable forcing mechanism for having folks suddenly say, hey, if you regulate this aspect of AI, then from a technical standpoint, it may not pose any issues. But if you calculate this aspect, now weβre starting to see that labs would have to change their behavior. And so litigation can be a very positive step that sends the signals to state legislators, hey, here are the areas where itβs clear for you to proceed and here are areas where the constitution says, whoa, thatβs Congressβs domain. And so Iβm optimistic that under the leadership of the attorney general and seeing folks like David Sacks, the AI and crypto czar, lend their expertise to these challenges as well, that weβre going to get the sort of information we need at the state and federal level for both parties to be more thoughtful about the sorts of regulations they should impose.
Terry Gerton All right, Kevin, underlying all of the things youβve just talked about is the concern you raised at the beginning. Will Congress step up and enact national legislation? What should be at the top of their list if theyβre going to move forward on this?
Kevin Frazier So the thing at the top of Congressβs list, in my opinion, has to be novel approaches, number one, to AI research. We just need to understand better how AI works, things like that black box concept we talk about frequently with respect to AI, and things like making sure that if AI ends up in the hands of bad actors, we know how to respond. Congress can really put a lot of energy behind those important AI research initiatives. We also need Congress to help make sure we have more data be available to more researchers and startups so that we donβt find ourselves just operating under the AI world of OpenAI, Microsoft and Anthropic. But we want to see real competition in this space. And Congress can make sure that the essential inputs to AI development are more broadly available. And finally, I think Congress can do a lot of work with respect to improving the amount of information weβre receiving from AI companies. So SB 53, for example, is a great example of a state bill thatβs trying to garner more information from AI labs that can then lead to smarter, better regulation down the road. But the best approach is for Congress to take the lead on imposing those requirements, not states.