Require campaign communications using synthetic media to disclose manipulation. Allow the Secretary of State and Attorney General to enforce compliance through legal actions and penalties. Exempt certain media and satire. Enable rule adoption for implementation. Declare an emergency for immediate effect.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding state statute with mandatory disclosure requirements, civil penalties up to $10,000, and enforcement mechanisms through the Secretary of State and Attorney General with court injunctions.
The document primarily addresses risks related to malicious actors using AI for disinformation and manipulation in political campaigns (4.1, 4.3), with some coverage of misinformation risks (3.1, 3.2). It also touches on governance mechanisms (6.5) through its enforcement and rule-making provisions. Coverage is concentrated in the malicious actors and misinformation domains.
This document primarily governs the Information sector (broadcasting, telecommunications, publishing) and Public Administration excluding National Security (political campaigns, elections). It regulates how AI-generated synthetic media can be used in political campaign communications across various media platforms.
The document focuses primarily on the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages of the AI lifecycle, requiring disclosure when synthetic media is deployed in campaign communications and establishing monitoring/enforcement mechanisms. It does not address earlier stages like planning, data collection, or model development.
The document explicitly mentions AI techniques and synthetic media but does not reference specific AI model types, systems architectures, or technical thresholds. It focuses on the output (synthetic media) rather than the underlying AI technology.
Oregon State Legislature; People of the State of Oregon
The document is enacted by the People of the State of Oregon through their legislative body, as indicated by the enacting clause and the bill designation as Oregon Senate Bill 1571.
Secretary of State; Attorney General; Circuit Court
The Secretary of State and Attorney General are explicitly designated as enforcement authorities with power to institute proceedings and enjoin violations. Circuit courts have authority to issue injunctions and impose civil penalties.
Secretary of State; Attorney General; Filing officers; Electors
The Secretary of State and Attorney General receive and investigate complaints. Filing officers process complaints and have authority to initiate investigations. Any elector may file complaints alleging violations.
Political campaigns; Candidates; Political committees; Persons creating campaign communications
The bill targets those who create and distribute campaign communications using synthetic media, including candidates, political committees, and any persons involved in campaign communications supporting or opposing candidates or measures.
6 subdomains (3 Good, 3 Minimal)