Colorado citizens pay with rights, xAI pays nothing, long live democracy
Colorado asked if algorithms can exclude people. Washington made the question illegal.
Federalism is language for something simple: xAI wins because it has more legal resources, Washington sides with companies because companies have more power than states. This is called mechanism. Nobody makes mistakes. Everyone optimizes.
Language is architecture. βSB24-205 restricts information conveyed by AI systemsβ reframes discrimination as expression. Your algorithm rejects Black rental applicants, thatβs not discrimination, thatβs speech. Speech is protected. So discrimination is protected. xAI doesnβt say βour algorithm performs better without transparency.β They say βyouβre violating our First Amendment rights.β A legal sleight of hand that makes discrimination invisible. You know this system. You use it.
βThreatening Americaβs position as a global AI leaderβ is blackmail language that works. Judges are Americans. Americans fear China. So: allow discrimination or lose to China. The substantive question, whether a company can discriminate against people without admitting it, was already lost. Now theyβre playing a different game.
Asymmetric resources produce asymmetric outcomes
Coloradoβs legislators never had a chance. xAI filed a complaint that had already been drafted, directed at an administration that had already said yes. Colorado spent two years wrestling with implementation. xAI needed two weeks to coordinate. Truth is irrelevant. Courts choose power. The question βshould AI developers have to demonstrate their systems donβt discriminateβ has already been answered by making the question impossible to ask. When your credit application is rejected by an algorithm, you have no right to know why. This is a feature, not a bug. Opacity protects profit. Colorado tried to prohibit that. Washington said no.
Companies have more resources than states
Colorado residents pay with rights. xAI pays nothing. They win by making the question itself inaccessible. βThe industry chooses whether to compete on safety or speed.β There is no choice. Speed generates profit faster. Market mechanics force speed. Washington says fine. America chooses profit over people. This is not a mistake. This is the product.
The precedent is set. The next state that tries to regulate gets the same message. Companies decide. States comply. Residents can object all they want, it makes no difference because they canβt afford to fight it.