
Machines Like Us When Did Common Sense AI Policy Become Radical?
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Feb 24, 2026 Alondra Nelson, social scientist and policy leader who led work on the AI Bill of Rights, discusses the rapid shift toward pro-growth, light-touch AI policy. She recounts Canada's task force dynamics, the U.S. policy pivot and its global influence, municipal levers for rights-based AI, and how long-view movements like Afrofuturism shape tech governance.
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U.S. Posture Shift Looks Like Deregulation But Isn't
- U.S. policy shifted quickly from advocating AI guardrails to signaling deregulation while actually steering the sector.
- Alondra Nelson argues the Trump order rescinds previous initiatives but reflects strategic, not hands-off, governance of AI.
Policy Tools Are Steering Winners Not Letting AI Run Free
- The Trump administration's AI approach uses active levers like tariffs, visa restrictions, and research steering rather than pure deregulation.
- Nelson highlights H‑1B visa fees and targeted research funding as examples of heavy-handed market shaping.
Follow The Money Explains Global Policy Convergence
- Global actors mimic U.S. posture because financial incentives and market signals matter more than rhetoric.
- Nelson says rising valuations in firms like NVIDIA create pressure internationally to pause or loosen regulation.
