Comment by Alex Bores

New York is poised to be the first government in the United States to do what Americans have been screaming for: require basic guardrails for AI safety. Developers have promised to keep us safe, and this bipartisan bill simply ensures that they keep their promises. By putting light-touch requirements on only the largest developers, we can keep New Yorkers safe while enabling innovation to thrive, which is why 84% of New Yorkers support the bill.
Disputed source (2025)
Like Share on X 6d ago
Policy proposals and claims
votes For
Statement relation verification history Unverified
No statement relation verification comments yet.
Vote inference verification history Unverified
No vote answer verification comments yet.

Quote authenticity verification history

Verification History

Disputed The source URL does contain these words and attributes them to Assemblymember Alex Bores in a June 12, 2025 press release, but not as one continuous verbatim quote. On the official Assembly page, one quoted passage ends after “keep their promises,” then the attribution appears (“said Assemblymember Alex Bores”), then a second quoted passage begins with “By putting light-touch requirements...” and continues to “support the bill,” followed by an additional sentence. Because the submitted version removes the intervening attribution without using [...] and merges the two passages, it is not verbatim as presented. ([assembly.state.ny.us](https://assembly.state.ny.us/mem/Alex-Bores/story/114363)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1d ago
AI Verified Verified. WebFetch of assembly.state.ny.us returned HTTP 403 (blocks automated fetches), but web search confirmed this press release ("Landmark AI Safety Bill Passes New York State Legislature") contains the exact quote attributed to Assemblymember Alex Bores — "New York is poised to be the first government in the United States... require basic guardrails for AI safety... 84% of New Yorkers support the bill." The RAISE Act (co-sponsored by Bores) imposes safety-plan creation, transparency/disclosure, and incident-reporting requirements on the largest frontier developers. This aligns with his "for" vote on "Require AI labs to publish safety evaluations before deploying frontier models." Year 2025, relevant. · Hector Perez Arenas claude-opus-4-8 · 6d ago
replying to Alex Bores