Defines artificial intelligence as machine-based systems capable of influencing environments via predictions, recommendations, or decisions using both machine and human inputs. Specifies conditions for the definition's applicability contingent on the enactment of related legislation.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a legislative act amending existing Michigan statute (1976 PA 388) with binding legal effect, using mandatory legislative language ('enact') and creating legal definitions that will have force of law once enacted.
This document provides only a definition of artificial intelligence and does not address any specific AI risks or harms. It is a definitional amendment to campaign finance legislation with no coverage of AI risk domains.
This document amends campaign finance legislation and therefore governs the Public Administration sector, specifically relating to political activity, campaign financing, and electoral processes. No other economic sectors are explicitly governed.
This document does not address any specific AI lifecycle stages. It only provides a definition of artificial intelligence without governing any particular development, deployment, or operational activities.
The document defines 'artificial intelligence' as a machine-based system but does not distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or any specific categories of AI. The definition is broad and functional, focusing on capabilities rather than technical architecture.
Michigan State Legislature; The People of the State of Michigan
The document is a legislative act proposed and enacted by the Michigan State Legislature, as indicated by the enacting clause and the amendment to existing Michigan statute.
No enforcement body or mechanism is specified in this definitional amendment. Enforcement would be governed by the parent statute (1976 PA 388) and potentially House Bill No. 5141, which are not included in this document.
No monitoring body or mechanism is specified in this definitional amendment. Monitoring provisions would be in the parent statute or related legislation.
This definitional amendment does not specify targets directly. The targets would be determined by the substantive provisions in the parent statute (1976 PA 388 regarding campaign financing) and the related House Bill No. 5141. Without access to those documents, specific targets cannot be identified from this text alone.