Amends the Communications Act of 1934 to require AI robocall disclosures, enhance penalties for AI impersonation, and outlines exemptions and disclosure conditions.
If you use AI for robocalls, you must disclose this or face enhanced penalties.
What do these statuses mean? ▼
Affected Industries
Topics How we classify →
What This Means
The QUIET Act aims to amend the Communications Act of 1934 by mandating disclosures for robocalls using AI, enhancing penalties for AI-based impersonation, and specifying exemptions and conditions for disclosures.
Key Provisions
- Amends the Communications Act of 1934.
- Requires disclosures for robocalls using AI.
- Enhances penalties for AI impersonation in voice or text messages, including fines and imprisonment.
- Exempts certain emergency services and government communications from disclosure requirements.
- Specifies disclosure conditions, format as a pre-call announcement, and timing at the beginning of the call.
Latest Legislative Action
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H519)
Bill Sponsors (showing 5 of 28)
| Name | Role | District |
|---|---|---|
| Adelita Grijalva D | Sponsor | HD-AZ-7 |
| Angela Craig D | Sponsor | HD-MN-2 |
| Brian Fitzpatrick R | Sponsor | HD-PA-1 |
| Christopher Deluzio D | Sponsor | HD-PA-17 |
| Darren Soto D | Sponsor | HD-FL-9 |
Compliance Checklist
Who: Telecommunication service providers
Deadline: Not specified
Penalty: Fines for non-compliance
Who: Companies using AI for communications
Deadline: Not specified
Penalty: Legal repercussions and fines
Related & Companion Bills
Full Legal Analysis
Official Source
Related Topics
Affected Industries
More United States (Federal) AI Legislation
More United States (Federal) AI Laws
Browse all published AI bills and regulations for United States (Federal).