ホワイトハウスのAI規制計画、ビッグテックが求めた連邦優先権を認める
ホワイトハウスのAI規制計画は、州独自の規制権限を剥奪し連邦政府に一元化する方針であり、これはビッグテックがロビー活動で求めてきた連邦優先権の付与に相当する。
キーポイント
規制権限の連邦一元化
ホワイトハウスはAI規制を連邦政府の管轄とし、州が独自の規制を設ける権限を制限する計画を進めている。
ビッグテックのロビー成果
この方針は、ビッグテック企業が長年ロビー活動を通じて求めてきた「連邦優先権(federal preemption)」の実現に直接つながる。
規制環境の劇的変化
州ごとに異なるAI規制が可能だった環境から、全国統一の規制枠組みへと移行することで、企業のコンプライアンス負担が軽減される見込み。
政策と産業界の利害一致
政府の規制効率化の意向と、ビッグテックの規制負担軽減要望が一致した結果、この計画が推進されている。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この計画が実現すれば、AI業界は州ごとの複雑な規制対応から解放され、事業展開が容易になる一方、連邦政府による規制強化の可能性も含んでいる。規制環境の予測可能性が高まることで、AI技術の投資と普及が加速する可能性がある。
編集コメント
政策と産業界の利害が一致した稀有な事例であり、今後のAI規制の方向性を決定づける重要な転換点となる可能性が高い。規制の効率化と産業保護のバランスが今後の焦点となる。

ホワイトハウスはAI規制を連邦の管轄事項とし、各州が独自の規則を定める権限を奪う方針だ。これはまさに、ビッグテックがロビー活動を通じて求めてきたことである。
本記事「ホワイトハウスのAI計画、ビッグテックが求めた連邦法優先権を実現」は、The Decoderに最初に掲載されました。
原文を表示
The White House has published a national AI framework plan with legislative recommendations for Congress.
The document covers seven key areas. On child protection, Congress should give parents more control over AI platforms and introduce age verification. Electricity customers shouldn't have to foot the bill for new AI data centers, and approvals for AI infrastructure should be fast-tracked.
On copyright, the government wants to let the courts decide whether AI training on protected material is legal. Instead of standing up a new AI regulatory agency, the administration is leaning on existing oversight bodies and industry standards. The plan also calls for education programs to get workers ready for AI, stating that "American workers must benefit from AI-driven growth, not just the outputs of AI development […]."
The framework would ban the government from pressuring AI providers to suppress lawful political speech. At the same time, it appears to align with Trump's campaign against allegedly "woke AI," creating an obvious tension: government pressure to make AI systems avoid views Trump sees as hostile would itself be a form of political censorship.
Congress should prevent the United States government from coercing technology providers, including AI providers, to ban, compel, or alter content based on partisan or ideological agendas.
National Policy Framework, Artificial Intelligence
Federal rules could strip states of most AI oversight
The most contentious piece of the plan: federal AI rules would override state laws to prevent what the administration calls "a fragmented patchwork of state regulations" that could hurt US competitiveness. Congress should preempt state AI laws that "impose undue burdens" and replace them with a single national standard.
The framework does carve out some exceptions. States would keep their traditional authority to enforce general laws against AI developers and users, including laws protecting children, preventing fraud, and safeguarding consumers. They'd also retain control over zoning decisions for AI infrastructure and rules governing their own use of AI in areas like law enforcement and public education.
But the limits are significant. States would not be allowed to regulate AI development at all, since the administration considers it "an inherently interstate phenomenon with key foreign policy and national security implications." States also couldn't impose rules that make it harder for Americans to use AI for activities that would be legal without AI, or hold AI developers liable for a third party's unlawful use of their models.
Google, OpenAI, and other tech companies have lobbied for uniform federal rules, arguing they're better for innovation. Trump has been pushing to get this legislation passed since taking office but hasn't had any luck so far. Critics warn this amounts to a centralization of power in the Trump administration over the potentially most transformative technology of our time and an attack on states' rights.
AI News Without the Hype – Curated by Humans
Subscribe to THE DECODER for ad-free reading, a weekly AI newsletter, our exclusive "AI Radar" frontier report six times a year, full archive access, and access to our comment section.
Subscribe now
関連記事
今日のまとめ
AI日報で今日の重要ニュースをまとめ読み