This week saw major updates in data privacy and security tied to AI agents. In the US, states like California and Colorado rolled out stricter rules for companies using AI-driven decision-making, requiring clearer explanations for automated choices. Meanwhile, the European Union shared new guidelines to ban risky AI practices, like emotion-recognition tools in workplaces.

A study found 45.77% of AI prompts contained customer data, raising alarms about leaks. In Italy, OpenAI was fined €15 million for training ChatGPT on personal data without permission, highlighting ongoing transparency issues. Experts urge businesses to build data protection into AI systems early to avoid fines and build trust.

Companies worldwide are now focusing on ethical AI governance, using tools like NIST’s AI Risk Management Framework to stay safe. The key takeaway? Balancing innovation with privacy is critical as laws evolve.

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