The California State Assembly passed on August 28, 2024 proposed bill SB 1047, also known as the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act, which aims to add new requirements to the development of large AI models by setting out various testing, safety, and enforcement standards. The proposed bill seeks to curb AI’s “potential to be used to create novel threats to public safety and security” such as weapons of mass destruction and cyberattacks.
The bill will return to the Senate floor for a final vote and, if approved, Governor Gavin Newsom will have until September 30, 2024 to veto the bill.
The bill would only apply to developers of “covered models,” which is a defined term that shifts over time based on computing power threshold. Prior to January 1, 2027, “covered models” are defined as AI models that are either trained (1) using computing power “greater than 10^26 integer or floating-point operations” (FLOP) that cost over $100 million to develop or (2) using fine-tuning with computing power of three times 10^25 integer or FLOP costing over $10 million.[1] This is the same computing threshold as set in the Biden administration’s recent Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence.[2]
After January 1, 2027, the cost threshold will remain the same (adjusted for inflation), but the computing power threshold will be determined by the US federal government’s Government Operations Agency.[3] Notably, the pre-2027 computing power threshold exceeds current capabilities of AI training models,[4] but it is expected that the next generation of highest-capability models will exceed this figure.
The bill would broadly cover any AI developers that offer their services in California regardless of whether the developer is headquartered in California.
The bill sets out various testing and safety requirements, including the following:
The bill further sets out enforcement authority and guidelines to ensure compliance:
The legislation has been amended from earlier versions to (1) exclude criminal penalties and (2) allow for civil penalties only where actual harm has occurred or imminent threats to public safety exist. We understand that these changes reflect input from the technology community to ensure that such laws do not quash innovation.
California has demonstrated a keen and focused interest in regulating AI and, in the interest of balancing the boom of AI innovation within the state, intends to be at the forefront of doing so nationally. The bill is currently focused on only the largest and most powerful AI models and, based on current computing power and cost thresholds, the requirements are less likely to impact AI startups, at least in the near term.
We are following this bill closely and will report back on any further developments.
If you have any questions or would like more information on the issues discussed in this LawFlash, please contact any of the following:
[1] S.B. 1047 § 3(e)(1)(A)(i), (ii) (Cal. 2024). “Fine-tuning” is the process of taking a pretrained model and adjusting it to better fit the existing model’s data.
[2] Executive Order No. 14110, 88 Fed. Reg. 75,191 (Oct. 30, 2023). While the executive order does not directly regulate private industry outside of potential national security implications, it requires federal agencies including the Department of Commerce to issue standards and guidance and use their regulatory authority to monitor AI.
[3] S.B. 1047 § 3(e)(1)(B).
[4] Computation Used to Train Notable Artificial Intelligence Systems, Our World in Data, last updated August 5, 2024.
[5] SB 1047 defines a “person” as an individual, proprietorship, firm, partnership, joint venture, syndicate, business trust, company, corporation, limited liability company, association, committee, or any other nongovernmental organization or group of persons acting in concert. S.B. 1047 § 3(m) (Cal. 2024). A developer is defined as a “person that performs the initial training of a covered model” by training or fine-tuning under the computing power and cost specified in the bill. Id. § 3(i).