An investigation by the Kansas Office of Judicial Administration revealed that a cyberattack last year may have exposed personal information of 150,000 people.
The National Association of State Chief Information Officers found that less than one quarter of states surveyed operate an "established" privacy program.
On the Priorities podcast, a fellow from the Electronic Privacy Information Center explains his complaint to the FTC about AI-powered fraud detection software.
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin charged state offices with reviewing potential AI hazards and noted that federal and state officials have been "too slow" to draft policies.