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      Home»Opinion»Regulating the Future Into the Ground
      Opinion

      Regulating the Future Into the Ground

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      Washington is moving fast on artificial intelligence regulation—but not necessarily in the right direction. What’s emerging from federal agencies and legislative proposals is a familiar pattern: a sprawling, bureaucratic response to a rapidly evolving technology, heavy on compliance frameworks and light on actual risk mitigation. The result is a regulatory environment that may look tough on paper but does little to address the real dangers already unfolding inside American enterprises. Meanwhile, the most pressing threats—shadow AI usage, uncontrolled agentic systems, and preventable operational failures—are accelerating largely unchecked.

      The core problem isn’t that policymakers are paying attention to AI. It’s how they’re doing it. The current approach leans heavily toward top-down rulemaking—layering reporting mandates, ethics boards, audit requirements, and certification regimes onto businesses that are still trying to understand how AI tools even function in practice. This kind of regulatory reflex may create the illusion of control, but it rarely translates into real-world safety. Instead, it slows innovation, burdens smaller firms, and shifts focus away from the operational discipline that actually prevents harm.

      Take the rise of “shadow AI,” for example. Across industries, employees are quietly integrating AI tools into workflows—feeding proprietary data into public chat systems, automating decisions without oversight, and deploying code generated by large language models without review. This isn’t hypothetical; it’s already happening at scale. Companies have reported sensitive internal documents being pasted into public AI platforms, exposing intellectual property and client data in ways that no compliance checklist would have stopped. These aren’t edge cases—they’re predictable outcomes of rapid adoption combined with weak internal controls.

      Then there’s the growing class of agentic AI systems—tools that don’t just generate content, but act autonomously. These systems can write code, execute tasks, and interact with live environments with minimal human input. In theory, they promise massive productivity gains. In practice, they introduce entirely new categories of risk. There have already been incidents where AI-driven scripts have inadvertently wiped databases, overwritten critical files, or triggered cascading system failures because guardrails were poorly defined or misunderstood. These are not science fiction scenarios—they are operational failures happening in real time.

      What’s striking is how little of Washington’s current regulatory push addresses these realities. Instead, the focus remains on broad, abstract concerns: algorithmic bias, long-term existential risk, and centralized oversight structures. Those issues matter, but they are not where the immediate damage is occurring. The real vulnerabilities are at the implementation level—inside companies, inside workflows, and inside the day-to-day decisions being made by employees who are often operating without clear guidance.

      This gap between regulation and reality creates a dangerous illusion. Policymakers can point to new rules and claim progress, while businesses assume compliance equals safety. It doesn’t. A company can check every regulatory box and still suffer a catastrophic data leak because an employee copied sensitive information into a chatbot. It can adhere to every governance framework and still experience a system failure because an autonomous agent was given too much access with too little oversight.

      Worse, heavy-handed regulation risks pushing innovation—and risk—further into the shadows. When compliance becomes too complex or costly, organizations don’t stop experimenting with AI; they simply do it informally, outside official channels. That makes the problem harder to detect and even harder to manage. Instead of creating transparency, overregulation can drive the most consequential activity underground.

      A more effective approach would start with a simple premise: innovation and safety are not opposing goals, but they must be aligned at the operational level. That means shifting focus away from centralized rulemaking and toward practical safeguards that companies can actually implement. Clear internal policies on data usage, strict access controls for AI systems, mandatory human review for high-risk actions, and continuous monitoring of AI outputs—these are the kinds of measures that prevent real-world failures.

      It also means recognizing that AI risk is not static. The technology is evolving too quickly for rigid regulatory frameworks to keep up. What works today may be obsolete in a year. Instead of trying to codify every potential risk into law, policymakers should prioritize flexibility—encouraging best practices, supporting industry-led standards, and enabling rapid iteration as new threats emerge.

      There’s a role for government, but it’s not to micromanage innovation from Washington. It’s to set clear boundaries where necessary—particularly around national security and consumer protection—while allowing the private sector to lead on implementation. That balance is difficult, but it’s far more realistic than the current trajectory of ever-expanding oversight.

      The bottom line is this: AI is already transforming how businesses operate, and the risks are already here. Pretending that more bureaucracy will solve those risks is not just misguided—it’s dangerous. The focus needs to shift from regulating what might happen to managing what is happening. Until that happens, Washington’s approach will continue to lag behind reality, leaving companies exposed and innovation constrained at the worst possible moment.

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