Elon Musk’s xAI sues Colorado over state’s new AI law

A 3D-printed miniature model of Elon Musk and xAI logo are seen in this illustration created on February 16, 2025. REUTERS
(Reuters) – xAI filed a lawsuit on Thursday seeking to block Colorado from enforcing a new law regulating artificial intelligence systems, escalating a fight over whether ​oversight should be handled by states or by Washington.
The lawsuit, ‌filed in U.S. District Court in Colorado, challenges Senate Bill 24-205, which is scheduled to take effect on June 30. The law imposes disclosure and risk-mitigation requirements on developers ​of so‑called “high‑risk” AI systems used in decisions involving employment, housing, ​education, health care and financial services.
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence firm ⁠said the law violates the First Amendment by restricting how developers ​design AI systems and compelling speech on contentious public issues.
The company says ​the law would force it to alter its flagship AI model, Grok, to reflect the state’s views on diversity and discrimination rather than being objective.
“Government regulation that is ​applied at the state level in a patchwork across the country ​can have the effect to hamper innovation and deter competition in an open market,” ‌xAI ⁠said.
xAI, which recently merged with SpaceX, is seeking a court declaration that the law is unconstitutional and an injunction blocking its enforcement.
The lawsuit also cites White House executive orders criticizing state-by-state AI regulation and federal warnings that ​patchwork state laws ​could undermine U.S. ⁠AI leadership and national security.
The Colorado Attorney General’s Office declined to comment on the litigation.
While some tech companies ​and Republican lawmakers want states to leave AI regulation ​to ⁠Washington, California’s attorney general has warned against relying solely on Congress, pointing to years of delays on data privacy and technology laws.
President Donald Trump’s AI advisers ⁠favor ​federal oversight through a streamlined national framework instead ​of a patchwork of state-level rules.

Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru, Juby Baby in ​Mexico City and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Leroy Leo

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