Adds disclaimer requirements for AI-generated deceptive media in political ads. Criminalizes distribution without proper disclaimers, punishable by misdemeanor or felony. Allows enforcement by authorities and affected parties. Specifies disclaimer format for various media types.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act enacted by the New Mexico Legislature with mandatory requirements, criminal penalties (misdemeanor and felony), civil penalties, and multiple enforcement mechanisms including attorney general, district attorneys, and private rights of action.
The document has good coverage of approximately 5-6 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.3), misinformation (3.1, 3.2), and AI system safety (7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in misinformation, malicious use, and transparency domains related to AI-generated deceptive media in political contexts.
The document primarily governs the Information sector (media, broadcasting, telecommunications, distribution platforms) and Public Administration excluding National Security (electoral processes, campaign activities). It regulates AI use in political advertising across various media platforms.
The document primarily addresses the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages of the AI lifecycle, focusing on requirements for AI-generated content used in political advertisements. It does not substantially cover earlier stages like planning, data collection, or model building.
The document explicitly defines and regulates artificial intelligence in the context of generating synthetic content (images, video, audio). It focuses on generative AI capabilities but does not mention AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
Legislature of the State of New Mexico
The document is a legislative act formally enacted by the New Mexico Legislature, as indicated in the enacting clause.
attorney general; district attorneys; depicted individuals; candidates for office; organizations representing voter interests; courts of competent jurisdiction
The act explicitly designates multiple enforcement actors including government officials (attorney general, district attorneys) and provides private rights of action for affected individuals and organizations.
secretary of state
The secretary of state is referenced as having authority to prepare and prescribe forms for compliance with the Campaign Reporting Act, indicating a monitoring and administrative role.
persons who create, produce, purchase, or distribute advertisements containing materially deceptive media; candidates; campaign committees; political committees; radio and television broadcasting stations; cable television, satellite television or streaming service operators; distribution platforms
The act applies to any person who creates, produces, purchases, or distributes AI-generated deceptive media in political advertisements, as well as media platforms and broadcasters who disseminate such content.
5 subdomains (4 Good, 1 Minimal)