Colorado, United States
Colorado AI Act
Colorado requires developers and deployers of high-risk AI systems to use risk management, impact assessments, and consumer notices tied to consequential decisions.
Unlock unlimited alerts, exports & API access — RuleWatch Pro at $29/mo
Regulation dossier
A focused view of the rule, its enforcement posture, and the timeline teams should keep in their operating plan.
Plain-English summary
Canada's proposed AIDA would create a federal framework for high-impact AI systems used in interprovincial and international commerce. It would require responsible persons to assess and mitigate risks of harm and biased output, keep records, publish plain-language descriptions, and notify the government of serious incidents. The proposal also gives the minister audit and order powers and creates offences for reckless or deceptive conduct involving AI systems.
Reading guide
Use the timeline below to see how the rule progressed from enactment to current obligations.
Related regulations surface adjacent requirements in the same jurisdiction or policy lane.
Timeline
Jun 16, 2022
Bill C-27 was introduced in the House of Commons, carrying the proposed AIDA as its AI title.
Get email alerts when this regulation changes and export records to CSV for your compliance workflow — available with RuleWatch Pro.
Subscribe for regulation alerts
Free weekly digest for compliance professionals following material legal changes.
Related regulations
Pulled from the same jurisdiction or category so teams can compare adjacent obligations quickly.
Colorado, United States
Colorado requires developers and deployers of high-risk AI systems to use risk management, impact assessments, and consumer notices tied to consequential decisions.
California, United States
California requires covered generative AI providers to give users clear provenance disclosures when AI-generated or AI-altered content is created or presented. It affects providers and some licensees of large generative AI systems and gives the Attorney General and local public lawyers a civil-enforcement path.
California, United States
California requires developers of generative AI systems made available to Californians to publish documentation about the data used to train those systems. It affects developers releasing public-facing generative AI systems or major modifications and is meant to improve transparency around dataset sources and composition.