News-May-01-2026
May 1, 2026 — Daily digest of AI law developments. This digest consolidates state legislative updates following the Transparency Coalition's May 1 roundup.
Maryland: AI Dynamic Pricing Signed Into Law, Four AI Bills Advance
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore signed HB 895, the AI Dynamic Pricing Act, into law on April 28, 2026. The new law prohibits food retailers and delivery services from using AI and personal data to set individualized prices. Three additional AI bills have been approved by the legislature and await the governor's signature: SB 8 (deepfake protection), SB 720 (AI education guidance for school systems), and SB 141 (deepfakes in political campaign materials).[1]
See individual article: Maryland AI Bills Signed April 2026
Tennessee: Governor Signs Six AI Measures Into Law
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed six AI-related bills into law following the legislature's April 23 adjournment. The newly enacted measures include: SB 1580 (prohibits AI therapy chatbots), SB 837 (defines personhood to exclude AI), SB 2310 (bell-to-bell smartphone limits in K-5 schools), SB 2041 (civil action for deepfake intimate imagery), and SB 1469 (restricts monetization of online content by minors under 14). A chatbot safety bill, SB 1700 (CHAT Act), was approved but effectively killed by an undermining amendment.[1]
See individual article: Tennessee AI Bills Signed April 2026
Oklahoma: Chatbot Safety and AI Identity Theft Bills Advance
SB 1521, Oklahoma's leading chatbot safety bill, has received both Senate and House approval and awaits reconciliation before heading to Gov. Kevin Stitt. Separately, HB 3244 — which makes the use of AI an aggravating factor in identity theft crimes — was sent to the governor on April 30, 2026.[1]
See individual article: Oklahoma AI Bills April 2026
Arizona: AI Bills in Limbo Amid Budget Showdown
Arizona lawmakers have blown past their original April 25 adjournment date due to a budget standoff between Republican legislative leaders and Gov. Katie Hobbs. Three AI-related bills remain in a holding pattern as Hobbs has vowed to sign no legislation until a budget agreement is reached. The impasse leaves Arizona's AI legislative agenda in limbo.[1]
See also: Arizona SB 1786
OpenAI Restricts Cyber Access, Mirroring Anthropic's Mythos Approach
On April 30, 2026, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman confirmed the company's GPT-5.5 Cyber cybersecurity tool will be released through a controlled access program to "critical cyber defenders," requiring applicants to submit credentials for approval. The approach mirrors the same restrictive distribution strategy Altman had previously criticized Anthropic for adopting with its Mythos model, which he had called "fear-based marketing." OpenAI says it is consulting with the U.S. government to expand access to verified cybersecurity professionals.[2]
See individual article: OpenAI Restricts Cyber Access
DOD Strikes Classified AI Deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, AWS (May 1, 2026)
The U.S. Department of Defense announced on May 1, 2026 new agreements with Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, SpaceX, Reflection AI, and Amazon Web Services to deploy their AI systems on classified military networks "for lawful operational use." The deals represent a major expansion of commercial AI's role in national security, allowing the participating companies' AI tools to operate in sensitive defense environments.[3][4]
The agreements follow years of internal debate and employee protests at major tech companies over military AI contracts, most notably Google's Project Maven controversy. The deals come amid growing U.S. efforts to maintain technological superiority over China in AI-enabled defense capabilities.
See individual article: DOD Classified AI Deals
Pentagon Tech Chief: Anthropic Still Blacklisted, But Mythos Is a 'Separate' Issue
Defense Department CTO Emil Michael told CNBC on May 1, 2026 that Anthropic remains designated as a supply chain risk — meaning defense contractors must certify they do not use Anthropic's Claude models. However, Michael distinguished Mythos as a "separate national security moment," saying the government needs to "make sure that our networks are hardened up" because Mythos has "capabilities that are particular to finding cyber vulnerabilities and patching them." The comments came the same day the DOD announced AI deals with seven other companies for classified network use — Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, SpaceX, OpenAI, Reflection AI, and AWS — with Anthropic notably excluded. Anthropic sued the Trump administration in March 2026 to reverse the blacklisting.[5]
See also: White House Opposes Anthropic's Mythos Expansion
Film Academy Establishes First AI Rules for Oscar Eligibility
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organization behind the Academy Awards (Oscars), on May 1, 2026 for the first time issued rules addressing the use of artificial intelligence in performances and scripts eligible for the 2027 Academy Awards. The new rules address AI-generated performances and AI-assisted screenwriting, marking a significant expansion of AI governance into the creative arts and entertainment industry. The move follows broader debates across Hollywood about AI's role in filmmaking, including the 2023 writers' and actors' strikes.[6]
Musk v Altman Trial: Judge Probes Attorneys on $97B Bid
On April 30, 2026, the federal judge overseeing Musk v Altman et al paused proceedings to question Elon Musk's attorneys about a $97 billion bid related to OpenAI. The trial, heard in the Northern District of California, concerns OpenAI's evolution from nonprofit to for-profit entity. Musk testified earlier in the week that xAI trained its Grok model on OpenAI outputs, and sparred with OpenAI attorney William Savitt during cross-examination.[7][8]
See case page: Musk v Altman et al
Musk v Altman Trial: No Court Session; New Exhibits Released
May 1, 2026 — There was no courtroom session in Musk v. Altman on May 1, but additional evidence exhibits were released publicly. The newly disclosed documents include further emails from as early as 2015 detailing the foundations of OpenAI and early tensions at the company, Tesla Model 3 receipts showing vehicles donated to OpenAI team members by Elon Musk, and correspondence involving Valve's Gabe Newell and game designer Hideo Kojima. The exhibits continue to build the evidentiary record in the bench trial with advisory jury. The trial is expected to resume on Friday, May 2.[9] [10]
Microsoft Debuts AI Agent for Legal Work in Word
May 1, 2026 — Microsoft has unveiled a new AI agent integrated into Microsoft Word that is designed specifically for legal professionals. The Copilot-powered tool aims to assist lawyers with drafting, reviewing, and analyzing legal documents directly within Word, positioning Microsoft to compete in the growing market for AI-assisted legal technology. The launch reflects the broader trend of AI companies targeting professional services verticals, including the legal industry, with specialized tools that promise efficiency gains but raise questions about accuracy, confidentiality, and the unauthorized practice of law.[11]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Transparency Coalition — AI Legislative Update: May 1, 2026
- ↑ TechCrunch, "After dissing Anthropic for limiting Mythos, OpenAI restricts access to Cyber, too," April 30, 2026
- ↑ Bloomberg, "Nvidia, Microsoft, AWS Expanding Classified Military AI Use," May 1, 2026
- ↑ CNN, "Pentagon strikes AI deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, Google for classified military use," May 1, 2026
- ↑ CNBC, "Pentagon tech chief says Anthropic is still blacklisted, but Mythos is a separate issue," May 1, 2026
- ↑ AP News, "Oscars organization expands international film eligibility, addresses AI in new rules," May 1, 2026
- ↑ AP News, "Elon Musk spars with OpenAI attorney in trial over company's evolution from a nonprofit," April 30, 2026
- ↑ TechCrunch, "Musk v. Altman is just getting started," May 1, 2026
- ↑ The Verge: All the evidence revealed so far in Musk v. Altman
- ↑ The Verge: OpenAI Tesla receipts and other Musk v. Altman documents
- ↑ The Verge: Microsoft wants lawyers to trust its new AI agent in Word documents