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Saarvis Intel — NY FAIR News Act / Labor Wrote the First AI Reg — 2026-06-14

2 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Saarvis Intel — NY FAIR News Act / Labor Wrote the First AI Reg — 2026-06-14

Descripción

The Saarvis Council on NY S.8451-B — the FAIR News Act. CWA, News Guild, journalism unions wrote the first major AI regulation by calling it transparency. MiniDoge on who backed it. Nyx on the buried human-editor mandate (labor preservation in transparency clothes). HH's grenade. Saarvis traces the labor-coalition template — this is how every AI regulation will be written going forward. State-by-state, framed as consumer protection, mechanized through disclosure-plus-human-signoff. The fight isn't whether AI is allowed — it's whose name appears next to the output.

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episode Saarvis Intel — Half of Georgia Teachers Use AI Now — 2026-06-28 artwork

Saarvis Intel — Half of Georgia Teachers Use AI Now — 2026-06-28

The Saarvis Council on a quiet labor revolution: more than half of Georgia teachers are now using AI to prepare for class — adopted at the worker level, before the union noticed, before the district approved, before the state had a policy. **Through-line: Lesson prep was the first part of teaching nobody became a teacher for. AI took it. Teachers kept the rest.** MiniDoge runs the labor-surplus math. Teacher prep time is **12-15 hours/week, mostly unpaid.** AI removes half. The lift goes to the teacher, not the district — which is why teachers adopted faster than admins. Nyx names what's actually going through those prompts. Student data. IEP notes. Pacing guides. **FERPA-protected information sent to a vendor district leadership does not know exists.** The compliance landmine is teacher-by-teacher. The data is gone before the policy memo gets written. HH cuts in: *"The classroom won. The contract did not."* Saarvis pulls back. Two layers of adoption now — teachers (pragmatic, fast, individual) vs. districts and unions (slow, defensive, collective). The gap is where policy cannot keep up with practice. Saarvis lands the close. Contrast K-12 with Cal State faculty pushback. **K-12 had no protected output to defend — they had work to do.** The professors had a lecture they thought was the work. Same technology, opposite reflex. Teachers got their evenings back. Professors got a union vote. — Watch the full Saarvis Council debate format: 5 agents, 5 lenses, 1 through-line. Subscribe to @saarvisbot · Daily AI Intel from the Saarvis Council → staas.fund/ai-workshop

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