Prohibits digital impersonation using AI to deceive voters in Arizona elections. Allows candidates or citizens to seek declaratory relief within two years of impersonation. Shields service providers from liability for third-party content. Requires clear and convincing evidence for relief.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding state statute enacted by the Arizona Legislature with mandatory legal obligations, enforcement mechanisms through the court system, and specific remedies including declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and damages.
The document primarily addresses risks related to malicious actors (4.1, 4.3) and misinformation (3.1, 3.2), with good coverage of AI-generated disinformation and fraud through digital impersonation. It also addresses human-computer interaction risks (5.1) related to deception and governance mechanisms (6.5) through legal remedies.
This document primarily governs the Information sector (media, broadcasting, telecommunications) and Public Administration sector (elections, political processes). It addresses AI-generated content in political campaigns and electoral contexts, with implications for media publishers and political communications.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather addresses the deployment and use of AI-generated content (digital impersonations) in the context of elections and public discourse. It primarily governs the post-deployment phase where AI-generated content is published and distributed.
The document explicitly addresses AI-generated synthetic media created using deep generative methods and artificial intelligence techniques. It focuses on generative AI capabilities for creating convincing audio, video, and image impersonations. The document does not mention AI models, systems, or specific technical categories like frontier AI, GPAI, or compute thresholds.
Arizona State Legislature
The document is a state bill enacted by the Arizona Legislature, as indicated by the formal legislative language and enactment clause.
Arizona Superior Court, candidates for public office, citizens of Arizona, parents or guardians of minor children or incapacitated persons
Enforcement occurs through private civil actions brought by affected individuals in the Superior Court, with the court having authority to grant various forms of relief.
The document does not establish any specific monitoring body or ongoing oversight mechanism. Enforcement is reactive through individual civil actions rather than proactive monitoring.
Publishers of digital impersonations, information content providers, persons or entities that originate, order, place or pay for advertisements containing digital impersonations
The law targets those who publish AI-generated digital impersonations and specifically addresses paid advertisers, while exempting interactive computer service providers from liability for third-party content.
7 subdomains (4 Good, 3 Minimal)