Businesses, developers say guardrails are important, but varied state laws create confusion.
By Erica E. Phillips, CT Mirror Journalist
Windsor-based technology services firm Cooperative Systems is using artificial intelligence to automate repeatable tasks for its clients and document customer interactions.
In New Haven, health startup Anthogen developed an AI tool for patients with chronic conditions that monitors vitals and sends reminders — to drink a glass of water, or stretch — to help avoid flare-ups.
And Cheshire marketing consultancy Rebellion Group uses AI to analyze customer decision-making, combing through online review language to understand the words and tone that appeal to individual users.
Connecticut companies in nearly every industry are deploying artificial intelligence across an expanding range of applications, using the technology to develop speedier, more consistent and better-tailored products and services.
At the same time, state and federal lawmakers are scrambling to ensure the safety and security of AI as its use cases grow as rapidly as the data troves they’re learning from.