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Wednesday · June 17, 2026 · Issue No. 898
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‘GOLD STANDARD’: FCC chair on Trump’s push to lead world in AI

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AI leadership: national security and opportunity

The recent interview with FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel offers a compelling glimpse into how U.S. policymakers are approaching artificial intelligence regulation. Speaking with CNBC's Julia Boorstin, Rosenworcel articulated a balanced perspective that acknowledges both the transformative potential of AI and the critical need for thoughtful guardrails. Her insights reveal how regulatory bodies are working to position the United States as a global AI leader while addressing legitimate concerns about safety and security.

Key insights from the conversation:

  • The FCC is pursuing a "whole of government approach" to AI regulation, collaborating across federal agencies rather than creating siloed oversight that could stifle innovation

  • Regulatory focus centers on three main areas: preventing consumer harm, protecting national security, and ensuring America maintains technological leadership

  • Rosenworcel emphasizes that thoughtful, collaborative regulation can actually accelerate innovation rather than impede it by creating market certainty

The most striking aspect of Rosenworcel's perspective is her rejection of the false dichotomy between regulation and innovation. "There's a tradition in Washington of thinking that you have to choose between innovation on one hand and consumer protection on the other," she notes. Instead, she positions well-crafted guardrails as enablers of innovation by creating the trust and certainty businesses need to invest confidently.

This balanced approach matters tremendously as countries race to establish AI dominance. We're witnessing a global competition where regulatory frameworks are becoming competitive advantages rather than burdens. Nations that create sensible, predictable environments for AI development will likely attract more investment and talent than those with either chaotic free-for-alls or innovation-crushing restrictions.

What the interview didn't address explicitly is how this regulatory philosophy applies to specific sectors. Healthcare provides an instructive example. The FDA has already begun adapting its approval frameworks for AI-driven medical devices through its Digital Health Center of Excellence. Companies like Aidoc and Zebra Medical have secured clearances for AI tools that help radiologists detect critical findings in medical images. This demonstrates how sector-specific regulation can actually accelerate adoption by providing the safety assurances healthcare providers require.

Another important dimension only briefly touched upon is how this federal approach intersects with state-level AI initiatives. California's recently signed Executive

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