This week saw major AI regulatory developments worldwide. In the U.S., California introduced new rules for AI-generated content, requiring clear labels and tools to detect fake images. Colorado shared plans to update its AI risk management laws to help businesses avoid unfair decisions.

In Texas, lawmakers proposed a strict AI governance bill to ban social scoring by AI systems, but experts worry it might hurt small companies. The European Union started checking if companies follow its AI safety rules, especially for high-risk uses like hiring or healthcare.

Globally, the U.S. and China agreed to work together on AI safety standards, focusing on preventing misuse of advanced tools. Meanwhile, Canada announced a public registry for government AI projects to increase transparency.

Businesses are scrambling to meet these rules, with many hiring AI compliance officers and testing new audit tools. Lawyers warn that ignoring these changes could lead to big fines or lawsuits.

Extended Coverage
From news to worker

Do not just read about agents. Build one that runs.

Create an agent from a short prompt, connect a gateway later, and pay mainly for active runtime.

No setup work4 gatewaysClone winnersState saved

Hosted agent

OpenClaw or Hermes

saved state
Browser
WhatsApp
Telegram
Slack
Generate setup files, upload prepared files, or launch from a marketplace kit. Stop, resume, clone, and rollback without losing memory.
Run an OpenClaw or Hermes agent without a server.
Open Agent Factory