TN, US · AI law tracker
HB2586 — TN, US
HB2586 is an AI governance legislation from TN, currently introduced. The bill requires the AI Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 reports to include AI fraud detection strategies [1]. AIGI tracks 1 primary-source update on this bill; the most recent was published on 2026-02-02.
Status & timeline
- Regulatory stage
- introduced
- Bill status
- introduced
- Authority / governing body
- Tennessee General Assembly
- Chamber
- house
- Document type
- legislation
Next deadline: Recommendations are required for inclusion in the Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 annual reports.
Subscriber only
Full obligation matrix
| Actor | Obligation | Deadline | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| governmental entity | May store plate data collected or retained through the use of an automated license plate recognition system for up to 100 days. | Upon enactment | — |
Subscriber only
Enforcement risk score
Announced regulation; enforcement footprint still forming.
Subscriber only
Role-based compliance checklist
- compliance_officer Monitor the legislative progress of HB2586 in the Tennessee General Assembly. (Ongoing)
- general_counsel Assess the potential impact of an increased data retention period for automated license plate recognition data on existing policies if HB2586 is enacted. (Upon enactment)
Intelligence briefs (1)
Tennessee HB2586: AI Council to Report on Fraud Detection
The bill requires the AI Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 reports to include AI fraud detection strategies [1].
This signals a legislative focus on AI-enabled fraud risks and the development of state-level mitigation strategies.
Deadline: Recommendations are required for inclusion in the Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 annual reports.
Primary source →Frequently asked questions
- What is HB2586?
- Tennessee's HB2586 expands the requirements for the Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 annual reports. These reports must now include recommendations for strategies to detect and minimize the risk of fraud perpetrated by individuals using artificial intelligence [1]. This legislative measure affects state government reporting on AI governance and potential future guidance on AI-enabled fraud. (65 words) Primary source →
- Why does HB2586 matter?
- This signals a legislative focus on AI-enabled fraud risks and the development of state-level mitigation strategies. Primary source →
- Who does HB2586 affect?
- This development primarily affects the Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council within the Tennessee state government, dictating specific content requirements for its upcoming annual reports. Private sector deployers utilizing AI for fraud detection or those whose systems could potentially be exploited for fraud may find these future recommendations relevant for their own risk management frameworks. Organizations engaging with the Tennessee state government on AI policy may also find the council's focus on fraud relevant. Primary source →
- What are the key dates for HB2586?
- Recommendations are required for inclusion in the Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council's 2026 and 2027 annual reports. Primary source →
- What is the current status of HB2586?
- As of the last published update, HB2586 is at the "introduced" stage, with bill status "introduced". Primary source →
- Where can I find the primary source for HB2586?
- The primary source for the most recent update is at https://wapp.capitol.tn.gov/apps/BillInfo/Default?BillNumber=HB2586&ga=114. AIGI publishes the full citation chain plus every approved brief on this bill. Primary source →
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