Last night, I testified in front of the Colorado Senate Judiciary Committee, and it was awesome. It was fantastic to see so many people involved in our government and so many folks interested in AI regulation. The bill on the docket was SB24–205 Consumer Protections for Artificial Intelligence. The bill was amended hours before the committee met, and many of us got the strike-through minutes before we had to testify. I find the pace of our government fascinating — passing a bill means it is on its way to becoming a law — remembering the Schoolhouse Rock days of “I’m just a bill, sitting on Capitol Hill,” it’s a long, long way.
The three high school students who were present in the courthouse to testify in favor of this bill made my evening. Young people involved in politics is exactly why I say yes to sharing my my knowledge. It was also incredibly lucky for me as the panel to approve this bill consisted of these high school students and myself — I was representing Bast AI the only business who testified in favor of this bill. I got to be grouped with these fantastic young people. I could tell that they had some debate training as they read through their statements with pathos!
Below is my formal statement, but I wanted to bullet out why I favored this bill; in fact, it matches a lot of what Phaedra and I wrote about in our book “AI for the Rest of Us.”
Preventing Bias and Discrimination:
Enhancing Consumer Trust:
Facilitating Accountability:
Promoting Ethical Standards:
Enabling Informed Consent:
Stimulating Innovation Responsibly:
Supporting Business and Regulatory Compliance and Oversight:
Catalyzing Improvement and Public Discourse:
Risk Management:
Equipping Industry and Governments for Better Governance:
Good evening, esteemed members of the committee,
My name is Beth Rudden CEO of Bast AI, and I come before you with over twenty years of experience in designing and building analytics, AI and information systems, including foundational work in establishing the data science profession at IBM as well as building the largest trustworthy AI Center of Excellence in the world. I served as a global technical executive IBM for 7 years before opening my own AI company in 2022. My deep involvement in the field has afforded me a clear understanding of both the potential and the challenges of AI technologies. It is from this perspective that I strongly support the SB 24–205 Consumer Protections for Artificial Intelligence’ bill.
This bill is a pragmatic and necessary measure to ensure that the development and deployment of high-risk artificial intelligence systems are conducted with the highest level of responsibility and care. The provisions outlined in the bill for both developers and deployers form a framework aimed at preventing algorithmic discrimination — a fundamental issue as AI becomes more embedded in our daily lives.
For developers, the bill mandates essential practices such as:
- Providing clear documentation and disclosures regarding the functionalities and risks of high-risk systems.
- Making available detailed information necessary for conducting thorough impact assessments.
- Ensuring all high-risk AI systems are accompanied by a publicly available statement that details the management of potential algorithmic discriminations.
For deployers, the bill requires:
- Implementation of a risk management policy and program.
- Completion of impact assessments to understand the broader effects of the AI systems they utilize.
- Notification to consumers when consequential decisions are made by these systems, enhancing transparency and trust.
Moreover, the bill sets forth requirements for the management of synthetic digital content, ensuring that such content is detectable and marked, thus safeguarding against the misuse of AI in generating deceptive information.
The stipulations for both general purpose and high-risk AI models to disclose in detail their design, training processes, and the data used for training, testing, and validation, are exactly the types of oversight needed to build trust in AI technologies. Such measures are not only about compliance but about fostering a culture of accountability and ethical consideration within the AI community.
The enforcement provisions, including the opportunity for developers and deployers to rectify violations before facing legal action, show a balanced approach to regulation — one that allows for correction and improvement rather than mere punishment.
This bill is a set of common-sense measures that provide a necessary foundation for the ethical development and deployment of AI. By supporting this bill, we commit to a path that respects consumer rights, promotes transparency, and fosters trust in the technologies that are shaping our future.
Thank you for your time and consideration of this critical legislation.