- Posts by Katherine Heaney
AssociateAttorney Katherine Heaney brings a dedicated and results-oriented approach to helping employers find practical and reliable solutions to various legal challenges.
She helps employers navigate the intricate federal, state, and ...
On June 22, 2025, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed into the law the Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act (TRAIGA) or (the Act). The Act, which goes into effect January 1, 2026, “seeks to protect public safety, individual rights, and privacy while encouraging the safe advancement of AI technology in Texas.”
Formerly known as HB 149, the Act requires a government agency to disclose to consumers that they are interacting with AI—no matter how obvious this might appear—through plain language, clear and conspicuous wording requirements, and more. The same disclosure requirement also applies to providers of health care services or treatment, when the service or treatment is first provided or, in cases of emergency, as soon as reasonably possible.
The Act further prohibits the development or deployment of AI systems intended for behavioral manipulation, including AI intended to encourage people to harm themselves, harm others, or engage in criminal activity (see a post by our colleagues on Utah’s regulation of mental health chatbots).
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Recent Updates
- The Rising Threats of Multi-Modal and Agentic AI in Cyber Attacks
- State Insurance Department Statements Scrutinize MA and MedSupp Unfair Trade Practices
- DOJ Subpoena Seeks Health Information of Hospital Patients Receiving Gender-Affirming Care: Will Judge Grant Motion to Quash?
- Podcast: 42 CFR Part 2 Final Rule: What’s Changing and What Do You Need to Know? – Diagnosing Health Care
- Congress Creates Yet Another Cliff for Medicare Telehealth Extensions (and We’re Running Out of Metaphors)