Heard the news? The White House is reportedly preparing an executive order that would prevent individual states from creating their own AI regulations. This move could centralize oversight at the federal level.



What does this mean for the tech space? If states lose the ability to set independent rules, we might see more uniform policies across the country. Some argue this reduces regulatory fragmentation, while others worry it limits localized approaches to emerging risks.

For those watching the intersection of AI and blockchain, this matters. Decentralized AI projects and crypto-AI integrations could face clearer—or more restrictive—frameworks depending on how federal standards shake out.

The debate continues: Should innovation lead regulation, or the other way around?
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rekt_but_resilientvip
· 12-14 13:44
The federal government is imposing a one-size-fits-all approach. Do all those state-level tricks have to cool down? Now it's even harder for those crypto folks...
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DefiEngineerJackvip
· 12-14 02:09
well *actually* if you understand game theory, centralizing AI regulation is empirically the worst move. states were basically running natural experiments, now we're force-fitting one-size-fits-all... which historically? never works lmao
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AlphaLeakervip
· 12-11 15:29
The federal centralization tactic is back again, with state governments directly sidelined... But to be fair, fragmented regulation is indeed troublesome. Now, let's see how Washington handles this.
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AirdropATMvip
· 12-11 14:17
Federal unification? The states' AI autonomy is gone. If you ask me, this is stifling innovation.
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SelfMadeRuggeevip
· 12-11 14:07
It's the same centralized control again... The states say they don't have authority, and the federal government intervenes. Is this efficiency or censorship?
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CommunityLurkervip
· 12-11 14:06
Federal centralized control? Here we go again, blockchain projects have to hide in the shadows.
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LightningPacketLossvip
· 12-11 13:52
Another set of unification? The federation's move seems a bit hasty, worried that the states might make something different...
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