Friday, March 20, 2026

UWCISA's 5 Tech Takeaways: Policy, Platforms, and Power Plays

 

Image Prompt: Make a photorealisic image of a sprawling city at night seen from above, with some neighborhoods lit by organized grid lighting and others flickering with scattered, mismatched neon signs and unregulated wiring. no people, no animals. Model: Nano Banana 2 via Poe.

New Federal AI Framework Aims to Override State-Level Rules

The Trump administration has introduced a national artificial intelligence policy framework aimed at creating a unified regulatory approach across the United States. The proposal would establish consistent safety, security, and operational standards for AI technologies, including rules around child protection, data center energy use, and intellectual property rights. A central objective is to stop individual states from creating their own AI regulations, which industry leaders argue would produce a fragmented system that could slow innovation and weaken the United States in its competition with China. The administration now wants Congress to convert the framework into law, though deep partisan divisions could make that difficult. (Source: CNBC)

  • National standard push: The administration wants one federal AI framework to replace a patchwork of state laws.
  • Balancing innovation and safety: The proposal combines pro-growth goals with guardrails on child safety, energy use, and intellectual property.
  • Political hurdles ahead: Even with White House support, turning the framework into law may prove difficult in a divided Congress.

Canadian Legal Tech Firm Clio Fights Off AI Giants and U.S. Pressure

Vancouver-based legal tech company Clio is trying to cement its place as a global AI leader while resisting pressure to move south of the border. CEO Jack Newton sees artificial intelligence as both an enormous opportunity and a growing threat as companies like OpenAI and Anthropic expand deeper into legal workflows. Clio has responded with major acquisitions, including its $1 billion purchase of vLex, and by leaning into what Newton describes as its biggest competitive advantage: proprietary legal data. Despite market volatility and rising investor scrutiny around SaaS businesses in the AI era, Clio has grown into one of Canada’s most valuable private tech firms and continues to expand internationally while keeping its headquarters in British Columbia. (Source: Financial Post)

  • AI as both opportunity and threat: Clio is using AI to expand, even as larger AI firms threaten to disrupt its market.
  • Data as the moat: The company believes its legal data ecosystem gives it a durable competitive edge.
  • A Canadian growth story: Clio is expanding aggressively abroad while deliberately choosing to remain headquartered in Canada.

Amazon vs. Perplexity: Legal Clash Over AI Shopping Agents Intensifies

A U.S. appeals court has temporarily allowed Perplexity AI to continue running its AI-powered shopping agents on Amazon, pausing an earlier court order that blocked the product. Amazon argues that Perplexity’s tools improperly accessed private customer accounts and masked automated behavior, creating security concerns. Perplexity denies the allegations and says the lawsuit is really an attempt to suppress competition and restrict how consumers use AI tools online. The court’s temporary stay gives Perplexity breathing room while the broader legal dispute continues, and the outcome could shape how AI agents are allowed to interact with major digital platforms in the future. (Source: Reuters)

  • A fight over AI platform access: Amazon and Perplexity are battling over whether AI shopping agents can operate on a major marketplace.
  • A temporary win for Perplexity: The appeals court pause allows the company to keep its tool active for now.
  • Broader implications for AI agents: The case could influence future rules for how autonomous AI tools interact with online services
For more context, see WSJ's article on Amazon's original win against Perplexity. 

OpenAI Unveils Plan for All-in-One AI “Superapp”

OpenAI is planning a desktop “superapp” that would bring together ChatGPT, its Codex coding platform, and a browser into one product. The move marks a shift away from a scattered collection of standalone offerings and toward a more unified user experience, as the company tries to sharpen its product focus and respond to stronger competition from Anthropic. OpenAI says the new app will center on “agentic” capabilities, allowing AI systems to perform tasks more autonomously on behalf of users, from coding to data analysis. The strategy also reflects the company’s growing attention to enterprise customers and productivity use cases. (Source: Wall Street Journal)

  • One app, not many: OpenAI is consolidating key products into a single desktop experience.
  • Agentic AI takes center stage: The new platform is designed to support more autonomous AI task execution.
  • Enterprise pressure is rising: The product shift reflects mounting competition and growing demand from business users.

AI Adoption Surges as Companies Struggle With Governance

A new LexisNexis report finds that generative AI has quickly moved from experimentation to daily use across professional workplaces, but governance and oversight have not kept pace. Many employees are using AI tools without formal approval, and large numbers still lack clear policies or sufficient training. At the same time, professionals say they are increasingly confident in using AI, even as many organizations struggle to explain how internal AI systems work. The report argues that human oversight remains essential and outlines practical steps for leaders to scale AI responsibly, including stronger governance councils, clearer policies, vetted tools, and better validation processes. (Source: LexisNexis)

  • Usage is accelerating faster than oversight: AI adoption is growing quickly, but governance structures are lagging behind.
  • Human validation still matters: Most professionals believe people should remain actively involved in AI-driven workflows.
  • Governance is the scaling challenge: Organizations need clearer rules, training, and controls to expand AI responsibly.

Author: Malik D. CPA, CA, CISA. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. 


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