Urges the Joint Legislative Committee on Technology and Cybersecurity to study AI's impact on operations, procurement, and policy. Requires a written report with recommendations submitted to relevant committees 60 days before Louisiana's 2024 Regular Session. Solicits input from several governmental and industry entities.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a non-binding concurrent resolution that urges and requests a legislative committee to conduct a study. It uses voluntary language ('urge and request') and creates no enforceable obligations, penalties, or binding requirements.
This document has minimal to no coverage of specific AI risk domains. It is a procedural resolution directing a study of AI's impact on government operations, procurement, and policy. While it mentions consumer protection broadly, it does not address specific risks or harms from the MIT taxonomy. The focus is on studying AI benefits and updating policies rather than mitigating identified risks.
This resolution primarily governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) as it directs state government agencies to study AI's impact on their operations, procurement, and policy. It also has minimal coverage of multiple other sectors through its broad reference to 'businesses in Louisiana' and 'private industry vendors doing business with the state.'
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages. It is a procedural resolution directing a study of AI's impact on government operations, procurement, and policy. The study scope is broad and could potentially cover multiple lifecycle stages, but the resolution itself does not explicitly address any particular stage.
The document mentions 'artificial intelligence' in general terms but does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or any specific categories of AI. It refers broadly to AI-powered applications and voice assistants but provides no technical definitions or scope distinctions.
Legislature of Louisiana
The Louisiana Legislature is the proposing body that passed this concurrent resolution directing a study of AI impact.
This resolution does not establish enforcement mechanisms or designate enforcement authorities. It is a non-binding directive to conduct a study.
House Committee on Commerce; Senate Committee on Commerce, Consumer Protection and International Affairs
These legislative committees will receive the study report and presumably monitor or review the findings and recommendations.
Joint Legislative Committee on Technology and Cybersecurity; state agencies; private industry vendors doing business with the state of Louisiana; businesses in Louisiana
The resolution targets the Joint Legislative Committee to conduct the study, and the study itself will examine AI's impact on state agencies and private vendors. The recommendations are intended to help government and businesses in Louisiana.