Tools to solve AI’s trust problem come at a cost; As presidential election looms, disparate approaches to cyber policy come into focus; FTC cloud market inquiry remains unresolved as US presidential race enters final stretch; Cyber risk tops C-suite concerns heading into US election
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Tuesday marks Election Day in the U.S., though for some states advance voting has been underway for weeks.
To mark the occasion, we wanted to include a few recent articles that detail the tech policy issues to watch, including AI oversight and national cybersecurity. You can find those stories in the newsletter below.
The company drew on its experience developing machine learning solutions to manage the deployment of its MillsChat tool, according to Jaime Montemayor, chief digital and technology officer at General Mills.
Government officials and security leaders hope the nation’s need for cyber resilience will transcend partisan politics regardless of the election results.
As the transition to remote work stirred organizations away from a traditional network perimeter, CISOs have seen cyberattack records shatter. Explore lessons for maximizing cybersecurity investments in this Trendline.
An ongoing investigation into hyperscaler competition initiated last year by the Federal Trade Commission has largely been overshadowed by AI regulation concerns.
American business leaders will continue to focus on data regulation, AI and technology investments regardless of which party prevails in November, according to PwC.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump promise to spur AI innovation, but a lack of bipartisanship and a patchwork of state laws could hinder the country’s global influence.
Analysts expect Kamala Harris to largely continue the current approach to AI oversight, while Donald Trump’s promise to repeal a Biden executive order signals a major shift.
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