Topic pageAI Impersonation

AI Impersonation laws by state

This topic looks at public legal signals around AI-enabled impersonation, including adjacent fraud and consumer-protection angles where explicit AI law is limited.

Educational summary only

Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.

Explore

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Specific law tracked

Tracked review identified a more explicit law or regulation touching this topic.

Limited coverage

Some related protections may exist, but coverage can be indirect or incomplete.

No tracked law

The current tracked review did not identify a specific law squarely in scope.

Developing

Bills, policy activity, or developing guidance may exist, but the picture is still moving.

Under review

Tracked public review for this topic is still incomplete or being curated.

Colors represent tracked legal coverage status, not guarantees of safety or enforcement outcomes.

Current topic

AI Impersonation

Coverage relevant to voice clones, deceptive identity use, and related impersonation harms.

United States law heatmapInteractive map of U.S. states colored by the selected digital reality law topic.

Locked selection

Hover and focus can still highlight the map, but this summary stays locked to the selected state.

Kentucky

Based on proposed legislation or active legislative development.

Developing

Kentucky is included in this MVP with cautious, typed sample coverage rather than a statute-by-statute legal survey. Public policy movement appears to be developing, but proposals and enforcement posture may still change quickly.

This classification is broad, incomplete, and based on limited public law coverage.

Selected state

Kentucky

AI Impersonation

Proposed / developing

Why this status

Based on proposed legislation or active legislative development.

Summary

Kentucky is included in this MVP with cautious, typed sample coverage rather than a statute-by-statute legal survey. Public policy movement appears to be developing, but proposals and enforcement posture may still change quickly.

What this means

  • Kentucky's current status for ai impersonation should be read as a practical orientation point, not a definitive legal conclusion.
  • Proposals can move quickly, stall, or change materially before enactment.

What to do next

  • Verify current official statutes, bills, and agency guidance relevant to ai impersonation.
  • If the issue carries business, safety, election, youth, or reputational risk, get current legal advice from qualified counsel.

Source basis

Partial public basis tracked

Confidence

Low confidence

Review scope

Review centered on currently tracked state-level law

Last reviewed

March 11, 2026

Broader state snapshot

DeepfakesNo tracked law
AI ImpersonationDeveloping
AI TransparencyUnder review
Youth & Social MediaSpecific law tracked
Synthetic Explicit ContentDeveloping
Privacy, Biometric, or AINo tracked law

Sources / references

Official links are still being curated for this sample entry. Verify current law directly before relying on the summary.
This classification is broad, incomplete, and based on limited public law coverage.
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Methodology

How this MVP classifies state coverage

  • Statuses summarize broad tracked legal coverage, not enforcement outcomes.
  • The dataset is typed local sample content, not automated legal scraping.
  • Official links and a fuller review workflow can be layered in later without replacing this model.

Dataset last updated April 2, 2026.