09/29/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/29/2025 14:58
What you need to know: Governor Newsom today signed legislation further establishing California as a world leader in safe, secure, and trustworthy artificial intelligence, creating a new law that helps the state both boost innovation and protect public safety.
SACRAMENTO - Governor Newsom today signed into law Senate Bill 53, the Transparency in Frontier Artificial Intelligence Act (TFAIA), authored by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) - legislation carefully designed to enhance online safety by installing commonsense guardrails on the development of frontier artificial intelligence models, helping build public trust while also continuing to spur innovation in these new technologies. The new law builds on recommendations from California's first-in-the-nation report, called for by Governor Newsom and published earlier this year - and helps advance California's position as a national leader in responsible and ethical AI, the world's fourth-largest economy, the birthplace of new technology, and the top pipeline for tech talent.
Governor Gavin Newsom
California works closely to foster tech leadership and create an environment where industry and talent thrive. The state is balancing its work to advance AI with commonsense laws to protect the public, embracing the technology to make our lives easier and make government more efficient, effective, and transparent. California's leadership in the AI industry is helping to guide the world in the responsible implementation and use of this emerging technology.
Senator Scott Wiener
Earlier this year, a group of world-leading AI academics and experts - convened at the request of Governor Newsom - released a first-in-the-nation report on sensible AI guardrails, based on an empirical, science-based analysis of the capabilities and attendant risks of frontier models. The report included recommendations on ensuring evidence-based policymaking, balancing the need for transparency with considerations such as security risks, and determining the appropriate level of regulation in this fast-evolving field. SB 53 is responsive to the recommendations in the report - and will help ensure California's position as an AI leader. This legislation is particularly important given the failure of the federal government to enact comprehensive, sensible AI policy. SB 53 fills this gap and presents a model for the nation to follow.
Mariano-Florentino (Tino) Cuéllar
Former California Supreme Court Justice and former member of National Academy of Sciences Committee on the Social and Ethical Implications of Computing Research
Dr. Fei-Fei Li
Co-Director, Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence
Jennifer Tour Chayes
Dean of the College of Computing, Data Science, and Society at UC Berkeley
California continues to dominate the AI sector. In addition to being the birthplace of AI, the state is home to 32 of the 50 top AI companies worldwide. California leads U.S. demand for AI talent. In 2024, 15.7% of all U.S. AI job postings were in California - #1 by state, well ahead of Texas (8.8% and New York (5.8%), per the 2025 Stanford AI Index. In 2024, more than half of global VC funding for AI and machine learning startups went to companies in the Bay Area. California is also home to three of the four companies that have passed the $3 trillion valuation mark. Each of these California-based companies - Google, Apple, and Nvidia - are tech companies involved in AI and have created hundreds of thousands of jobs.
SB 53 establishes new requirements for frontier AI developers creating stronger:
✅ Transparency: Requires large frontier developers to publicly publish a framework on its website describing how the company has incorporated national standards, international standards, and industry-consensus best practices into its frontier AI framework.
✅ Innovation: Establishes a new consortium within the Government Operations Agency to develop a framework for creating a public computing cluster. The consortium, called CalCompute, will advance the development and deployment of artificial intelligence that is safe, ethical, equitable, and sustainable by fostering research and innovation.
✅ Safety: Creates a new mechanism for frontier AI companies and the public to report potential critical safety incidents to California's Office of Emergency Services.
✅ Accountability: Protects whistleblowers who disclose significant health and safety risks posed by frontier models, and creates a civil penalty for noncompliance, enforceable by the Attorney General's office.
✅ Responsiveness: Directs the California Department of Technology to annually recommend appropriate updates to the law based on multistakeholder input, technological developments, and international standards.
A signing message can be found here.