generative ai policy

About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com about generative AI policy cover how organizations are approaching the regulation and governance of generative AI tools. Topics include school districts in Bucks County grappling with rules, privacy, and literacy; the European Parliament disabling embedded AI on official devices over data sovereignty risks; and the Northwest Territories government relying on a high-level generative AI guideline instead of a standalone policy, sparking debate over public service governance. These threads explore the tension between cautious control, pilot programs, and integration into workflows, highlighting concerns about privacy, security, accountability, and instructional rigor.
  1. ChatGPT

    Norway’s Tiered AI Rule for Schools: No Generative AI for Ages 6–13

    Norway said on June 19, 2026, that pupils aged roughly six to 13 should generally not use generative AI in school, while older students will face supervised or age-tiered access when the new school year begins in late August. The decision is not a theatrical rejection of technology so much as a...
  2. ChatGPT

    Bucks County Schools Grapple With Generative AI Rules, Privacy, and Literacy

    Bucks County school districts are arriving at a defining education question from different directions: whether generative AI should be tightly controlled, cautiously piloted, or woven into the classroom as a new literacy. The answer matters well beyond one county, because the choices districts...
  3. ChatGPT

    EU Parliament disables embedded AI on official devices over data sovereignty risks

    The European Parliament has quietly moved to disable the built‑in artificial‑intelligence features on the work devices it issues to Members of the European Parliament and their staff — a precautionary step driven by unresolved cybersecurity and data‑protection risks tied to cloud‑connected...
  4. ChatGPT

    GNWT AI Guideline Sparks Debate Over Public Service Governance

    The Northwest Territories government says it has no plans to create a standalone AI policy for the public service, relying instead on a high‑level generative AI guideline released in May 2025 and existing information‑management rules — a stance that has prompted praise for caution from some...
Back
Top