Proposed Oklahoma Artificial Intelligence (AI) Bill of Rights

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All citizens of the State of Oklahoma are entitled to the following rights:

1. The right to know when they are interacting with an artificial intelligence engine rather than a real person;

2. The right to know when their data is being used in an artificial intelligence model and the right to opt out;

3. The right to know when contracts and other documents that they are relying on were generated by an artificial intelligence engine rather than a real person;

4. The right to know when they are consuming images or text that were generated entirely by an artificial intelligence engine and not reviewed by a human;

5. The right to be able to rely on a watermark or some other form of content credentials to verify the authenticity of creative product they generate or consume. Specifically, it shall not be permissible for any websites, social media platforms, search engines, and the like, to remove a watermark or content credential without inserting an updated credential that indicates that the original was removed or altered.

6. The right to know that any company which includes any of their data in an artificial intelligence model has implemented industry best practice security measures for data privacy, and conducts at least annual risk assessments to assess design, operational and discrimination harm.

7. The right to approve any derivative media that is generated by an artificial intelligence engine and uses audio recordings of their voice or images of them to recreate their likeness.

8. The right to not be subject to algorithmic or model bias which discriminates based on age, race, national origin, sex, disability, pregnancy, religious beliefs, veteran status, or any other legally protected classification.

House Bill 3453 aims to establish the Oklahoma Artificial Intelligence Bill of Rights and offers definitions of what is a “real person” and what is “artificial intelligence. HB 3453 is sponsored by Sen. Todd Gollihare (R-Kellyville), Reps. Jeff Boatman (R-Tulsa) and Daniel Pae (R-Lawton).