The FTC is seeking comment on a proposed policy statement that would treat certain undisclosed ideological distortions in AI outputs as potentially unfair or deceptive under US consumer-protection law. It also raises possible federal preemption when state rules conflict. There is a legitimate problem here. If a company markets a system as neutral, comprehensive, or evidence-based while secretly tuning it to omit relevant facts, users may be buying something different from what was advertised. But regulating “accurate answers” creates a second problem: many questions have incomplete evidence, disputed definitions, or value judgments embedded in the wording. A government standard for the correct output could become more dangerous than the bias it is meant to fix. A narrower approach may be more enforceable: regulate product representations, source disclosure, known limitations, consistency with stated policies, and whether material constraints are hidden. In other words, police deceptive claims about the system rather than selecting the answer the system must give. What belongs inside consumer protection here: factual error rates, undisclosed tuning objectives, source transparency, or the political balance of outputs? The public-comment deadline is July 31. Source: https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2026/07/ftc-seeks-public-comment-policy-statement-addressing-ai-accuracy submitted by /u/Crescitaly
Originally posted by u/Crescitaly on r/ArtificialInteligence
