Prohibits state agencies from using AI for unlawful discrimination, surveillance without a warrant, and malicious deepfakes. Requires human review of irreversible AI decisions. Mandates disclosure of AI-generated content. Obligates compliance and reporting within specified timelines.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding state statute enacted by the New Hampshire legislature with mandatory obligations, compliance requirements, and enforcement mechanisms through state agencies.
The document has good coverage of approximately 8-9 subdomains, with strong focus on discrimination (1.1), surveillance and malicious use (4.1, 4.3), human-computer interaction (5.1, 5.2), governance (6.5), and AI system safety (7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in discrimination prevention, misuse prevention, human oversight, and transparency domains.
This legislation governs AI use across all state government operations, primarily affecting Public Administration (excluding National Security) with comprehensive coverage, and National Security with moderate coverage through law enforcement provisions. The regulation applies to government agencies rather than private sector industries.
The document primarily addresses the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages, with requirements for human review before deployment of irreversible decisions and ongoing compliance monitoring. It also implicitly covers Plan and Design through prohibited use cases and Verify and Validate through required human review processes.
The document explicitly defines and covers AI systems and generative AI. It does not mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI capabilities and applications rather than technical classifications.
New Hampshire Senate; New Hampshire House of Representatives
The document is a state statute enacted by the New Hampshire legislature, as indicated by the enactment clause and approval process.
department of information technology
The department of information technology is designated as the primary enforcement body responsible for receiving compliance reports, maintaining code of ethics, and reporting to state leadership.
department of information technology; governor; speaker of the house of representatives; president of the senate
The department of information technology monitors compliance through annual reporting, with oversight by the governor and legislative leadership who receive compliance reports.
State agencies; department of information technology; legislative and judicial branches of state government; law enforcement; state-funded institutions of higher learning
The law explicitly applies to all state agencies including legislative, judicial, and executive branches, with specific exemptions for research institutions and consumer devices.
10 subdomains (7 Good, 3 Minimal)