News-April-10-2026

April 10, 2026 — Daily digest of AI law and policy developments.

This digest consolidates 3 stories from April 10, 2026.

Contents

1. California SB 1015 Targets Deepfake Extortion of Minors 2. Maine Legislature Approves AI Mental Health Services Ban 3. New Hampshire Senate Passes Data Protection Division Bill


California SB 1015 Targets Deepfake Extortion of Minors

California SB 1015, authored by Senator Strickland, expands existing California laws on contact with a minor to include threats or extortion induced through AI-generated deepfake images.

SB 1015 amends existing California statutes prohibiting contact with a minor with criminal intent to explicitly cover threats or extortion targeting minors through AI-generated deepfake images. The bill addresses the growing threat of deepfake-enabled sextortion, where synthetic nude or compromising images are generated using AI and used to coerce minors.

The bill incorporates and expands penalties from the underlying "contact with a minor with intent" laws, which typically involve felony charges with multi-year prison sentences depending on circumstances.

Legislative History:

  • April 7, 2026: Scheduled for Senate Public Safety Committee hearing (continued to April 8)
  • April 8, 2026: Approved by Senate Public Safety Committee; sent to Senate Appropriations Committee

This legislation addresses an emerging threat where AI-generated deepfake imagery is used for sextortion and coercion of minors. By explicitly amending criminal statutes to cover AI-generated synthetic images, the bill closes a potential gap where existing laws might not clearly cover deepfake-generated content.

See full article: April 10, 2026 — California SB 1015 Deepfake Extortion


Maine Legislature Approves AI Mental Health Services Ban

Maine LD 2082, also known as An Act Regarding the Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Provision of Mental Health Services, prohibits licensed mental health professionals from using AI to perform core clinical therapeutic functions, while permitting AI for administrative support tasks.

The bill was approved by both the Maine House and Senate on April 7, 2026, and approved in concurrence on April 8, 2026. The Maine Legislature was scheduled to adjourn on April 15, 2026.

Core Prohibitions: LD 2082 prohibits licensed mental health providers from using AI to:

  • Make independent therapeutic decisions
  • Interact with clients
  • Generate therapeutic recommendations

The bill prevents AI from delivering core clinical functions that depend on a licensed professional's training, experience, judgment, and ethical decision-making.

Permitted Uses: Providers may use AI for administrative support tasks (managing appointments, processing billing, drafting logistical communications) and with client consent, maintaining client records and analyzing therapy notes.

Informed Consent Requirements: Providers using AI must obtain informed consent from clients and must disclose the specific purpose of the AI tool and how session data will be stored, retained, used for training, and deleted after therapy ends.

Violations carry civil penalties of up to $10,000 per violation, determined based on the degree of harm and circumstances.

LD 2082 is part of a broader 2026 state legislative trend addressing AI in mental health services. Tennessee SB 1580, signed on April 1, 2026, takes a different approach by prohibiting AI systems from representing themselves as qualified mental health professionals.

See full article: April 10, 2026 — Maine AI Mental Health Ban


New Hampshire Senate Passes Data Protection Division Bill

New Hampshire SB 564 establishes the Division of Data Protection within the New Hampshire Attorney General's office and creates a state data privacy task force.

The bill creates a dedicated Division of Data Protection within the Office of the Attorney General, centralizing enforcement of New Hampshire's data privacy laws under a specialized unit rather than relying on the AG's general enforcement authority.

New Hampshire's existing comprehensive data privacy law (HB 1597, signed March 6, 2024) grants the Attorney General exclusive enforcement authority, including 60-day cure notices for violations (required only until December 31, 2025), with the power to pursue actions afterward without notice. No private right of action exists under the existing law.

SB 564 also establishes a state data privacy task force.

Legislative History:

  • Bill introduced in the 2026 Regular Session
  • April 8, 2026: Passed the New Hampshire Senate unanimously, 43-0
  • As of April 13, 2026: Pending in the House of Representatives

If enacted, SB 564 would formalize New Hampshire's commitment to data protection enforcement by creating a permanent, specialized division within the AG's office. This follows a national trend of states establishing specialized privacy enforcement units to address the complexity of data protection regulation and AI-related data concerns.

See full article: April 10, 2026 — New Hampshire Data Protection Division

References