On artificial intelligence policy, it’s California versus Congress - Orange County Register
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMipgFBVV95cUxNYVJzM3dIZ2lZZ1E3dVhtTjFtbWU4VXVIcE1HdTQ4Z2Rwc0JHYXZ0N2F5eG14MF9nZ3ZXSGN5S2RNUVFUXzRTWjBoZTJNblhZVnhEQURfMmtocXZITDNXUEdYYWxVQ2JIY1RiWnlleDR3aDJ3bTZBdF9rMVpEcFFJUnRvMFh1T0pZRkZBOURvSmJab292elVZcS11YjhYcXp2MFVaZWFn?oc=5" target="_blank">On artificial intelligence policy, it’s California versus Congress</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">Orange County Register</font>
Could not retrieve the full article text.
Read on Google News: AI →Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
policycongress
From edge to enterprise: How the endpoint became IT’s most strategic layer and why Lenovo is joining the conversation at IGEL Now & Next Miami
For years, the enterprise endpoint was treated as a commodity: a device to deploy, patch, and eventually replace. The real innovation was expected to happen in the data center or the cloud. That assumption is changing. In today’s distributed environments, endpoints have become a critical part of the digital workspace architecture. It is where users authenticate, where security policies are enforced, and where the experience of modern work is ultimately delivered. As organizations rethink hybrid work, zero trust security, and cloud-first applications, the endpoint is evolving from a simple access device into a strategic platform. This shift is why Lenovo is joining the conversation at IGEL Now & Next Miami 2026 , where technology leaders are exploring how the next generation of secure digit
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Laws & Regulation

Social media’s ‘Big Tobacco’ moment may have finally arrived
A pair of landmark court cases found Meta and YouTube guilty last week of harming young users by designing algorithms that were addictive and led to mental health distress. The damages assessed against the companies amounted to a fraction of a percent of their annual earnings. The long-term implications, however, could be far more significant. The rulings found that programmed algorithms are not protected by Section 230, the federal law that shields social media companies from liability for user-posted content. That represents a crack in a legal defense these companies have relied on for years. And thousands of similar cases are already pending. Section 230 has been under scrutiny for some time. Lawmakers have repeatedly called for its repeal, though efforts so far have failed to gain trac


Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!