Know when it is a machine.
Consumer-facing systems should disclose that they are AI, including reminders during ongoing interaction.
A policy framework from ASAI
Six baseline protections every American deserves when artificial intelligence enters the conversation.
The framework
The framework translates familiar consumer protections into the places people now encounter AI: conversations, classrooms, crisis moments, likeness misuse, campaign ads, and enforcement.
Consumer-facing systems should disclose that they are AI, including reminders during ongoing interaction.
Companion and chatbot deployers should get verified parental consent before ongoing interaction with a minor.
AI should not replace qualified human help when a user indicates self-harm or acute crisis.
People should have a remedy when AI uses their name, image, voice, or likeness without permission.
Political ads generated or substantially modified by AI should say so on the face of the ad.
Rights need clear enforcement authority and practical remedies when people are harmed.
Why this page exists
A clean, repeatable frame for explaining why disclosure, consent, likeness, crisis escalation, and enforcement belong together.
A plain-English bridge from constituent harms to legislative obligations, with bill materials and the tracker one click away.
A fast answer to the basic question: what should people be able to expect when AI systems enter everyday life?
State case study
Florida's AI Bill of Rights writes six baseline protections into state law. The Senate passed SB 482 by a 35-2 vote, and the special session is the remaining window this year to finish the job.
These provisions reflect how Floridians actually use and encounter AI today, from kids with chatbots to political ads on the feed.
Evidence trail
The full eight-page packet: framework, SB 482 provisions, Senate vote record, state context, and source notes.
A print-ready summary of the six-rights framework and the national context behind it.
See how the rights framework appears across state bills, enacted laws, and frontier-model proposals.
This prototype keeps the public promise simple, then sends serious readers into the fact sheet, Florida briefing, and state tracker for verification.