Machines Like Us

When Did Common Sense AI Policy Become Radical?

27 snips
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.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

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.
INSIGHT

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.
INSIGHT

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.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app