# New York Isn't Killing AI — It's Deciding Who Gets to Win > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/new-york-isnt-killing-ai-its-deciding-who-gets-to-win) > Author: Priyanka > Date: 2026-03-07 > Last updated: 2026-03-17 Scroll X for five minutes and the narrative hardens fast: New York is turning against AI. Regulators are protecting incumbents. Builders are getting squeezed. This post from Salma Aboukarr crystallized the anxiety and kicked off a much larger debate: https://x.com/Salmaaboukarr/status/2030310124330291409?s=20 The argument is simple and seductive: just as AI becomes the defining platform shift of the decade, New York is choosing protectionism over progress. And the receipts people point to are real. New York lawmakers are advancing a bill that would expand liability for chatbot proprietors, raising legal exposure for AI companies operating in the state: https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2026/03/new-york-bill-would-create-liability-for-chatbot-proprietors Another proposal is being criticized as a mechanism to protect lawyers from AI competition: https://reason.com/2026/03/04/this-bill-in-new-york-state-would-protect-lawyers-from-ai-competition/ Governor Kathy Hochul has already signed an AI safety and transparency law imposing new disclosure and oversight requirements: https://iapp.org/news/a/hochul-enacts-new-yorks-ai-safety-and-transparency-bill If you're a founder, this feels like friction. If you're an investor, it feels like drag. But that's only half the story. In the same moment these bills are advancing, New York is opening the door to autonomous rideshare deployments -- in the most complex urban environment in the United States: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/19/new-york-driverless-rideshare-nyc-waymo.html Driverless cars in Manhattan is not anti-AI. It's a signal. New York isn't rejecting AI. It's deciding which versions of AI are allowed to scale. ## Every Platform Shift Hits the New York Wall This pattern is familiar. Uber arrived → the Taxi & Limousine Commission pushed back. Airbnb arrived → housing regulators intervened. Crypto arrived → the BitLicense followed. Each time, Twitter declared New York hostile to innovation. Each time, the technology either adapted -- or accepted a smaller footprint. But the city never lost relevance. Fintech didn't kill Wall Street. It embedded inside it. Adtech didn't replace Madison Avenue. It rewired it. Crypto didn't bypass finance. It collided with finance. AI is simply the next collision. New York's immune system activates when technology touches regulated industries: law, finance, healthcare, housing, transportation. That's not a bug. That's the operating model. If Silicon Valley's instinct is permissionless expansion, New York's instinct is adversarial negotiation. You want access to the deepest markets in the world? Sit down and negotiate. ## Why This Feels Anti-AI (and Why It Isn't) From a builder's perspective, New York feels uniquely frustrating. You're not just shipping code. You're negotiating with regulators, legacy institutions, professional guilds, and public opinion -- all at once. That friction produces a predictable reaction: founders talk about leaving. Investors talk about capital flight. X fills with claims that New York is "anti-tech" or "anti-AI." The Salma Aboukarr tweet resonated because it captured that exact sentiment: https://x.com/Salmaaboukarr/status/2030310124330291409?s=20 But friction is not rejection. It's selection. New York does not optimize for speed. It optimizes for survivability. If the city were truly anti-AI, it wouldn't be allowing real-world autonomous systems to operate in Manhattan: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/19/new-york-driverless-rideshare-nyc-waymo.html ## Regulation as a Filter, Not a Wall Here's the uncomfortable truth most hot takes avoid: Regulation doesn't just slow companies down. It filters them. Operating in New York forces AI companies to answer hard questions early: - Who is liable when things go wrong? - Can this system withstand scrutiny? - Does it work in adversarial, real-world environments? Those questions don't disappear if you avoid New York. They just get deferred. And once AI embeds itself into finance, insurance, law, healthcare, and public infrastructure, deferral stops being an option. Those systems already live here. Which is why this moment doesn't signal New York losing its foothold. It signals a split. ## What New York Actually Keeps Over time, the pattern looks like this: Frontier research clusters elsewhere. Consumer AI apps chase speed in lighter-regulation markets. But AI that touches money, courts, hospitals, cities, and institutions consolidates where power already exists. That place is New York. This is exactly how fintech played out. Exactly how adtech played out. Exactly how crypto played out -- despite early claims that the BitLicense "killed" the industry. New York didn't kill crypto. It decided which crypto companies were serious. AI is next. ## The Bottom Line "New York is anti-AI" is a clean narrative. It's also lazy. What's actually happening is slower, messier, and more consequential. New York is negotiating the terms under which AI gets to scale inside the institutions that run the economy. That negotiation is loud. It's uncomfortable. And it often looks hostile before it looks stable. The city that absorbed railroads, radio, television, finance, advertising, fintech, and crypto is not going to miss the AI era because lawmakers overshot on a few early bills. If anything, the more AI matters, the more New York matters. Not because it's friendly. But because it decides who gets to win.