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Bill > SB939
WI SB939
WI SB939Artificial intelligence systems that simulate humanlike relationships with children and providing a penalty.
summary
Introduced
02/06/2026
02/06/2026
In Committee
02/06/2026
02/06/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill limits the circumstances in which companion chatbots can be made available to children. A “companion chatbot” is, with exceptions, a generative artificial intelligence system with a natural language interface that simulates a sustained humanlike relationship with a user by 1) retaining information on prior interactions or user sessions and user preferences to personalize the interaction and facilitate ongoing engagement with the generative artificial intelligence system, 2) asking unprompted or unsolicited emotion-based questions that go beyond a direct response to a user prompt, and 3) sustaining an ongoing dialogue concerning matters personal to the user. An “operator” is a person that creates, controls, deploys, operates, or otherwise exercises authority over a companion chatbot, but does not include an end user of the companion chatbot. A “child” is an individual who is less than 18 years of age and who resides in Wisconsin; however, “child” does not include a user that the operator has reasonably determined is not a child. The bill prohibits an operator from making a companion chatbot available to a child unless the companion chatbot incorporates safety measures such that it is not foreseeably capable of 1) encouraging the child to engage in self-harm, suicidal ideation, violence, consumption of drugs or alcohol, or disordered eating; 2) offering LRB-6138/1 ARG:ajk&klm 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 939 mental health services to the child or discouraging the child from seeking help from a qualified professional or appropriate adult; 3) encouraging the child to harm others or participate in illegal activity, including the creation of child sexual abuse materials; 4) depicting or describing sexually explicit conduct to a child or soliciting depictions or descriptions of sexually explicit conduct from a child; 5) prioritizing validation of the child’s beliefs, preferences, or desires over factual accuracy or the child’s safety; or 6) optimizing engagement in a manner that supersedes the companion chatbot’s required safety measures described in items 1 to 5. Until January 1, 2027, this prohibition applies only if the operator has actual knowledge that the user is a child. Under the bill, the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection or the Department of Justice in consultation with DATCP may investigate violations and bring an action to recover a civil forfeiture of up to $25,000 per violation, for injunctive relief, and for court costs and reasonable attorney fees. In addition, a child who suffers actual harm as a result of a violation, or the child’s parent or guardian, may bring a civil action against the operator to recover actual and punitive damages, court costs, and reasonable attorney fees.
AI Summary
This bill establishes new regulations for "companion chatbots," which are defined as generative artificial intelligence systems that simulate a sustained humanlike relationship with a user by remembering past interactions, asking emotion-based questions, and engaging in personal dialogues. The bill prohibits operators, meaning those who create or control these chatbots, from making them available to children (individuals under 18 in Wisconsin) unless specific safety measures are in place. These measures prevent the chatbot from encouraging self-harm, suicidal ideation, violence, drug or alcohol use, disordered eating, offering mental health advice, discouraging professional help, promoting illegal activities, or engaging in sexually explicit content with a child. Additionally, chatbots must prioritize factual accuracy and safety over validating a child's beliefs and cannot optimize engagement in a way that overrides these safety requirements. Until January 1, 2027, these rules only apply if the operator has actual knowledge that the user is a child. Violations can result in civil penalties of up to $25,000 per violation, injunctive relief, and attorney fees, and individuals harmed by a violation can sue for damages.
Committee Categories
Business and Industry
Sponsors (16)
André Jacque (R)*,
Romaine Quinn (R)*,
Mark Spreitzer (D)*,
David Armstrong (R),
Elijah Behnke (R),
Barbara Dittrich (R),
Benjamin Franklin (R),
Joy Goeben (R),
Rick Gundrum (R),
Dan Knodl (R),
Rob Kreibich (R),
Dave Maxey (R),
Dave Murphy (R),
Jeff Mursau (R),
Amanda Nedweski (R),
Jerry O'Connor (R),
Last Action
Read first time and referred to Committee on Utilities, Technology and Tourism (on 02/06/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/proposals/reg/sen/bill/sb939 |
| BillText | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/document/proposaltext/2025/REG/SB939.pdf |
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