Gate News message: The Georgia State Legislature officially adjourned on April 6, 2026, and three AI-related bills have been submitted for Governor Brian Kemp’s signature. Among them, the AI chatbot regulation bill has drawn the most attention and may set a precedent for AI compliance frameworks across the United States.
The core bill, SB 540, requires chatbot platforms to clearly disclose an “AI identity,” impose restrictions on underage use, and must provide privacy protection tools, as well as activate an intervention mechanism when users show self-harm or suicidal tendencies. Notably, the bill does not include any industry exemption provisions, meaning that major technology platforms would also need to comply, with enforcement strength clearly stronger than most state-level legislation.
Meanwhile, the SB 444 bill explicitly prohibits making health insurance underwriting decisions based solely on AI systems, and requires human review to be introduced in order to prevent automated systems from replacing clinical judgment. Another SR 789 resolution proposes establishing a specialized committee to continuously assess the long-term social and economic impacts of artificial intelligence.
This legislative progress comes as U.S. states accelerate their push for AI regulation. Data show that in 2026, more than 27 states have been advancing similar chatbot safety bills, with a focus on protecting minors and algorithm transparency. However, the federal level has taken a cautious stance on this trend. The Trump administration previously warned that if states legislate separately, it could lead to fragmented regulation and drive the creation of unified national standards.
Judging by the policy signal, Georgia’s move may become an important milestone for strengthening AI regulation. If the bill takes effect, it is expected to increase platforms’ compliance costs while also accelerating the industry’s evolution toward a stricter accountability framework.