Prohibits sports wagering operators from using AI to track individual wagers, target promotions, or create gambling products like microbets. Requires operators to follow strict data security and consumer protection standards, including preventing underage gambling and ensuring contest integrity.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal legislative instrument with mandatory compliance requirements, enforcement mechanisms, penalties, and regulatory oversight by designated state entities and the Attorney General.
The document has good coverage of approximately 8-10 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.3), privacy and security (2.1, 2.2), human-computer interaction (5.1), socioeconomic harms (6.2, 6.4), and AI system limitations (7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in consumer protection, fraud prevention, data security, and responsible AI use domains.
This document primarily governs the Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation sector, specifically the gambling and sports wagering industry. It also has secondary coverage of the Information sector due to regulation of interactive/internet sports wagering platforms and data processing requirements.
The document focuses primarily on the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages of the AI lifecycle, with specific prohibitions on AI use in sports wagering operations and requirements for ongoing monitoring and compliance.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence in the context of sports wagering operations, prohibiting its use for specific purposes. It does not define AI models, AI systems, or reference specific AI categories like frontier AI, GPAI, foundation models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress, Attorney General
The document is a Congressional act (Sec. 103) that establishes federal standards for state sports wagering programs, with the Attorney General having approval authority over state applications.
Attorney General, State regulatory entity, Federal and State law enforcement
The Attorney General approves state programs, state regulatory entities enforce compliance through licensing, audits, and investigations, and law enforcement investigates criminal violations.
State regulatory entity, independent third-party auditors, sports organizations
State regulatory entities conduct periodic audits and receive real-time data from operators. Independent auditors evaluate internal controls. Sports organizations receive suspicious transaction reports for events they sponsor.
Sports wagering operators, State regulatory entities
The document directly regulates sports wagering operators who deploy AI systems for gambling operations, specifically prohibiting certain AI uses. States must establish regulatory entities to oversee these operators.
10 subdomains (4 Good, 6 Minimal)