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Industry Tracker · AI Laws by State

Telecommunications AI Laws & Regulations

12 published AI bills and regulations affecting Telecommunications across 7 states. Updated daily from official state legislature records.

12 Total Bills
7 States
1 High Risk
US SB3354
Introduced Medium Risk

QUIET Act Quashing Unwanted and Interruptive Electronic Telecommunications Act

SB3354 is a federal bill amending the Communications Act of 1934 to mandate disclosures for AI-driven robocalls, focusing on impersonation based on the official description.

US HB7783
Introduced Medium Risk

AI-Ready Networks Act

The AI-Ready Networks Act mandates a report by the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information on integrating AI into U.S. telecommunications infrastructure and other purposes, including enhancing cybersecurity and promoting innovation.

US HB334
Introduced Medium Risk

To amend the Communications Act of 1934 to establish technical and procedural standards for artificial or prerecorded voice systems created through generative artificial intelligence, and for other purposes.

The bill aims to amend the Communications Act of 1934 to establish standards for AI-generated voice systems, but specific details are unknown due to lack of bill text.

OH HB392
Introduced Medium Risk

Enact the Ohio Right to Compute Act

HB392 enacts section 9.89 to limit regulation of certain computational systems, including AI, and requires risk management for AI-controlled critical infrastructure.

VT H0208
Introduced Medium Risk

An act relating to consumer data privacy and online surveillance

VT H0208: An act relating to consumer data privacy and online surveillance. Detailed analysis pending full bill text availability.

MD HJ4
Introduced Low Risk

Aligning With the Blueprint for an Artificial Intelligence Bill of Rights (Maryland Safe Artificial Intelligence Act)

HJ4 is a resolution affirming Maryland's commitment to the AI Bill of Rights for safe AI use.

CA AB1355
Dead Medium Risk

Location privacy.

CA AB1355: Location privacy bill with proposed amendments. Details on Sections 1798.100, 1798.121, 1798.14.5, Title 1.81.24, and Section 1798.90.75 will be provided once the bill text is available.

US SB1638
Introduced High Risk

Protection Against Foreign Adversarial Artificial Intelligence Act of 2025

This bill aims to protect the U.S. from AI applications linked to foreign adversaries, enhancing national security.

NY A03327
Introduced Medium Risk

Requires any political communication, whether made by phone call, email or other message-based communication, that utilizes an artificial intelligence system to engage in human-like conversation with another shall, by reasonable means, apprise the person of the fact that they are communicating with…

This bill mandates that political communications using AI for human-like conversation must inform recipients they are interacting with an AI system.

CA AB853
Passed Both Chambers Medium Risk

California AI Transparency Act.

AB-853 aims to enhance AI transparency by amending the Business and Professions Code, focusing on AI system disclosures and compliance penalties.

NY S08459
Introduced Medium Risk

Prohibits transcripts being made from video conference meetings by artificial intelligence without conspicuous disclosure during such meeting that such meeting may be transcribed by artificial intelligence.

This bill prohibits AI from transcribing video conference meetings without clear disclosure to participants.

OK SB546
Passed Both Chambers Medium Risk

Data privacy; establishing consumer rights; appeal process; privacy notice; data protection assessments; penalties; liability. Effective date.

SB546 aims to establish consumer rights, an appeal process, data protection assessments, and outlines penalties and liability to enhance data privacy in Oklahoma. The bill's effective date is July 1, 2024.

AI Regulation in the Telecommunications Industry

State legislatures across the United States are actively developing artificial intelligence regulations that directly affect Telecommunications companies and practitioners. These laws address a wide range of concerns including algorithmic discrimination, automated decision-making, data privacy, consumer transparency, and the use of high-risk AI systems that can materially affect individuals' lives. As of 2026, 7 states have introduced or enacted legislation with direct implications for Telecommunications.

Compliance requirements vary significantly by state, making it essential for Telecommunications legal and compliance teams to track both enacted laws and pending bills. Key obligations may include conducting algorithmic impact assessments, providing consumer disclosures when AI is used in consequential decisions, implementing risk management programs, and ensuring human-in-the-loop oversight for high-stakes outcomes. Penalties for non-compliance can be substantial — see our Penalty Tracker for details by state.

To assess your organization's specific compliance obligations under current and upcoming Telecommunications AI regulations, use our Am I Affected? tool. For upcoming enforcement dates, visit the Deadlines page or the Deadline Calendar. Use the Bill Comparator to analyze differences between state laws side-by-side.