Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Pielli’s artificial intelligence content disclosure bill advances out of House Communications and Technology Committee

Pielli’s artificial intelligence content disclosure bill advances out of House Communications and Technology Committee

HARRISBURG, May 5 – State Rep. Chris Pielli, D-Chester, said today his legislation (H.B. 95) that would require the disclosure of content generated by artificial intelligence, or AI, for the sale of consumer goods has advanced out of the House Communications and Technology Committee.

“The premise of this bill is simple. If it’s AI, it has to say it’s AI,” Pielli said. “People deserve to know if what they’re looking at is real or not when making purchases. Disclosures should be clear and conspicuous in the same medium as the content generated to help consumers make better-informed and more secure purchases. We also hope to curb possible misinformation by malicious authors who intentionally generate and spread this content with the goal of fooling the public.

“Artificial intelligence is becoming a more prevalent component of our everyday lives,” he said. “As AI becomes more sophisticated, it becomes more difficult to verify the author of material and content produced. Additionally, the questionable veracity of some AI content has the potential to spread false information or images.

“The current law puts a responsibility on consumers with ‘Buyer Beware’ requirements. But how can a consumer fulfill that responsibility when they don’t know if what they are looking at is real or not? What if seeing is no longer believing and the term ‘I saw it with my own eyes’ no longer has merit?

“As legislators, we have to set a commonsense baseline helping our consumers make informed decisions and not be misled. This bill helps to set those guidelines. I thank my colleagues in the House for their support of this legislation in the last session and I hope to get this important bill to the governor’s desk.”

Pielli introduced this bill as H.B. 1598 during the 2023-24 legislative session. It passed the House on April 10, 2024, with a bipartisan 146-54 vote. The bill was then referred to the Senate Committee on Communications and Technology, where it received no further vote.