Enacts the "Responsible Deployment of AI Systems Act," requiring the classification of AI systems in Oklahoma by risk level, mandating oversight and audits for high-risk AI systems. Establishes the Artificial Intelligence Council to enforce compliance, oversee innovation programs, and guide ethical AI deployment.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act with mandatory requirements, enforcement mechanisms including financial penalties and system suspensions, and establishment of a regulatory body (AI Council) with enforcement authority.
The document has good coverage of approximately 8-10 subdomains, with strong focus on discrimination and bias (1.1, 1.3), privacy and security (2.1, 2.2), misinformation (3.1), malicious actors (4.1), human-computer interaction (5.1), governance structures (6.5), and AI system safety (7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in fairness, transparency, and governance domains.
The document governs AI deployment across multiple sectors with explicit coverage of health care, finance and insurance, public administration, and national security/law enforcement. It also implicitly covers critical infrastructure and utilities through its risk classification framework.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on deployment, operation and monitoring. It addresses planning through risk classification requirements, verification through mandatory audits and assessments, deployment through notification and approval processes, and ongoing monitoring through performance evaluations and oversight mechanisms.
The document explicitly defines and covers AI systems broadly as 'artificial intelligence or machine learning–based or algorithmic technology.' It does not specifically mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI systems generally, classified by risk level rather than technical characteristics.
Oklahoma State Legislature; Oklahoma House of Representatives
The document is a House Bill proposed by the Oklahoma Legislature, as indicated by the title 'Oklahoma House Bill 1916' and the enactment clause.
Artificial Intelligence Council (AI Council)
The AI Council is established as the primary enforcement body with authority to issue penalties, suspend systems, and mandate oversight. The Council is composed of nine members appointed by the Governor, Speaker of the House, and President Tempore of the Senate.
Artificial Intelligence Council (AI Council)
The AI Council is responsible for monitoring compliance through annual reports, analyzing feedback, overseeing the sandbox program, and receiving annual performance reports from deployers. Independent auditors also play a monitoring role for high-risk systems.
The act explicitly targets 'deployers' defined as 'any public entity, private organization, or individual that implements AI systems for operational use' and applies to 'all public sector agencies and private entities deploying artificial intelligence (AI) systems affecting individuals within this state.'
14 subdomains (7 Good, 7 Minimal)