AI robocalls and texts would have to tell people at the start when AI is being used to sound like a human. Scammers could face doubled top fines if they use AI to impersonate someone for fraud, harm, or wrongful gain.
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QUIET Act is a House bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H519).
Latest action on H.R. 1027: Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H519)
Who this affects: This bill mainly affects people who receive robocalls and automated texts. It could help them spot when AI is behind a message. It also affects businesses, campaigns, customer service systems, and other groups that use automated calls or texts. Bad actors who use AI to impersonate people or organizations could face higher top penalties.
Why this matters: AI can make automated calls and texts sound more like real people, and this bill would make that harder to hide. The disclosure rule could help people spot AI before they respond. The higher penalty limits target scams where AI is used to impersonate trusted people, businesses, or government offices. The real effect would depend on how regulators and courts enforce the law.
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