Khari Johnson
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California is the seventh U.S. state to adopt mobile driver’s licenses for iPhones, part of a growing push by businesses and governments to make digital IDs commonplace.
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The California Legislature passed more than a dozen bills to regulate artificial intelligence in recent days, though some ambitions fell short.
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Schools that banned phones a few years ago have advice for other districts as the governor calls for a crackdown.
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The sprawling California legislation offers protection to whistleblowers and citizens. The coming weeks could decide its fate.
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State regulators propose rules on evaluating workers and job applicants with AI.
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The California Public Utilities Commission rejected the telecom’s bid to stop providing service in many parts of the state.
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Three men falsely arrested based on face recognition technology have joined the fight against a California bill that aims to place guardrails around police use of the technology. They say it will still allow abuses and misguided arrests.
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California policies could have a huge effect on AI going forward. The EU wants to advise and coordinate.
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The proposed cuts could jeopardize plans to build the largest public broadband network in the United States.
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About 450 companies are on the data broker registry in California, and a law passed last year will make it easier to delete the data they collect about people.
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Gov. Newsom has yet to appoint a commander who is tasked with informing businesses and governments of cybersecurity threats.
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Wednesday could be your last chance to apply for a federal high-speed internet subsidy. Unless Congress intervenes, the program that subsidizes internet access for poorer Californians will run out of money in April — and also pull the plug on a state program to expand broadband access.