LAS VEGAS — Policy, as well as the ongoing political chaos in the U.S. House, took a more center stage Friday at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
Sen. Jackie Rosen (D-Nev.) spoke to the crowd in her home state, alongside Sens. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.), about their tech agenda priorities for the new year.
- The Democrats said the U.S. needs to invest more in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, advanced engineering and synthetic biology to help compete on a global scale.
- Warner said the investments should follow the path Congress took in passing the Chips and Science Act last year.
- The senators also said expanding fast and affordable broadband access needs to be priority for Congress.
Tough road forward: Three overarching areas of tech policy kept coming up throughout CES programming: data privacy, content moderation and antitrust law.
Warner said a federal data privacy bill, a "long overdue debate" about Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, and legislation about dominant platforms self-preferencing their products and services are also among his priorities this year.
But lawmakers face a tough Congress this year, with split control between the Democratic Senate and Republican House.
Antitrust may pose some of the toughest battles for supporters looking to reform the law. Even when Democrats controlled both chambers and had support from the Biden White House, two key proposals — including one around self-preferencing — failed to get across the finish line last year.
Charlotte Slaiman, competition policy director at Public Knowledge, said she is optimistic about the future path for antitrust reform, especially given the energy built by a coalition of supporters over the past few years.
But Tyler Grimm, chief counsel for policy and strategy for House Judiciary Committee Republicans, said the committee under GOP control is largely going to focus on content moderation concerns over antitrust battles.
However, he provided a caveat that it's difficult to tell what the scope of the committee will be given the lack of a consensus on who the Speaker of the House will be after more than a dozen votes failed to garner enough support for Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.).
Outside of Congress, the tech policy world will also have their eyes on the Supreme Court and two cases that could alter the fate of Section 230. The controversial provision provides a liability shield that protects tech companies over content posted by third parties.
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