I’m concerned, given Brazil’s dark march down the road of censorship as seen with Alexandre de Moraes banning people on Twitter, that these regulations will be abused and used to limit free speech and skew politics. Regulations like those on “disinformation” are also often selectively applied.<p>I also don’t think it is reasonable to prevent people from inferring or predicting things based on learned factors. It’s one thing if an AI is directed to be discriminatory. But if it learns that one particular trait or the other is predictive of something else, should we really be banning that? I can see that having bad consequences. For example, younger males are more likely to drive recklessly - if they are scored higher for risk, is that really a bad thing?<p>Stepping back, I think this is part of a long trend of states over-regulating themselves into stagnation. I think this political culture is going to severely hurt them in the long term. Anyone who wants to build a great business will just go do it elsewhere.