AI & Markets Briefing
- EU lawmakers agreed on amendments to the AI Act, including a ban on AI‑generated intimate content and changes to high‑risk rules.
- The Trump administration is moving toward tighter federal oversight of powerful AI models, with major firms agreeing to pre‑release testing.
- Colorado and Illinois are advancing new state‑level AI bills focused on consequential decisions, safety, and child protection.
- The Pentagon selected an AI stack for classified networks, while draft federal policy seeks to curb contractor influence on tech use.
- Enterprise AI joint ventures and global market jitters highlight the broader economic backdrop.
1. Global & U.S. AI Regulation
EU AI Act amendments
EU lawmakers reached agreement on amendments to the EU AI Act. The changes include:
- A new ban on AI‑generated intimate content.
- A delay to when high‑risk rules start applying.
- Adjustments to how the law interacts with sector‑specific safety regimes.
Source: MLex
U.S. federal oversight and model testing
In the United States, the Trump administration is moving toward tighter federal oversight of powerful AI models. Major firms including Google, Microsoft, xAI, OpenAI, and Anthropic have agreed to let the federal government test certain advanced AI systems before public release, as part of a broader “AI evaluations ecosystem.”
Source: Tom’s Hardware
Political reaction in Washington
Senator Bernie Sanders praised a new FDA‑style oversight proposal for AI, saying the Trump administration is “beginning to face reality” about AI risks. He also called for stronger consumer and worker protections around AI.
Source: Benzinga
2. State‑Level AI Laws in the U.S.
Colorado: New framework for “consequential decisions”
Colorado lawmakers are advancing an AI bill that would replace the state’s pioneering 2024 AI law with a framework more acceptable to industry. The proposal focuses on automated systems that make “consequential decisions” in areas such as jobs, credit, housing, and healthcare, and is slated to take effect on January 1, 2027, if passed.
Source: Axios Denver
Illinois: Safety and child‑protection measures
In Illinois, legislators are debating several AI safety and child‑protection bills. Proposals include requiring companies to prioritize user safety and potentially holding them liable for harm from AI systems. Supporters argue guardrails are overdue, while critics warn about chilling innovation.
Source: Axios Chicago
3. Federal Tech & Defense Moves on AI
Pentagon AI stack for classified networks
The Pentagon has selected a new “AI stack” for classified networks at Impact Levels 6 and 7. Multiple tech providers have been contracted to support data fusion, situational awareness, and decision‑support for military operations using advanced AI tools.
Source: Techi
Draft policy on contractor influence
Separately, draft policy circulating in Washington would limit how much federal contractors can influence agencies’ decisions about how AI and other technologies are used. This signals a more hands‑on federal posture toward AI deployment compared with earlier, more laissez‑faire signals from the Trump administration.
Source: Nextgov
4. AI Industry & Enterprise Deals
Joint ventures for enterprise AI services
Anthropic and OpenAI are both pursuing joint‑venture structures to sell enterprise AI services. At least one high‑profile partnership is reportedly valued around $1.5 billion and backed by major private‑equity investors. These deals aim to deepen enterprise adoption of frontier models while sharing risk and governance with large corporate partners.
Source: TechCrunch
5. Broader Market and Global Context
Market sentiment and energy prices
Global markets remain sensitive to geopolitical tensions and energy prices. In India, the Sensex and Nifty opened lower today amid worries over Middle East dynamics and crude prices, reflecting risk‑off sentiment noted in some pre‑market commentary.
Source: News9Live
European news agenda
Across Europe, the May 7, 2026 news agenda is dominated by debates over tech sovereignty, AI regulation, and broader geopolitical and economic issues, as reflected in European outlets’ morning bulletins.
Source: Euronews
All items are based solely on the linked public reports as of the morning of Thursday, May 7, 2026 (U.S. Eastern time).