On July 11, 2024, the New York State Department of Financial Services (“NYDFS”) issued a circular letter (the “AI Circular Letter”) addressing the use of external consumer data and information sources (“ECDIS”), and artificial intelligence systems (“AIS”) in insurance underwriting and pricing. The AI Circular Letter outlines the NYDFS’s expectations regarding the development and use of ECDIS, AIS and other predictive models by insurers, including:
The NYDFS released a proposed draft of the AI Circular Letter (“Proposed Circular Letter”) on January 17, 2024, and requested comments from the public regarding the Proposed Circular Letter. The final AI Circular Letter reflects the NYDFS’s consideration of comments on the Proposed Circular Letter it received from insurers, trade associations, advisory firms, universities, and the broader public.
The AI Circular Letter applies to all insurers authorized to write insurance in New York, Article 43 Corporations, health maintenance organizations, licensed fraternal benefit societies, and the New York State Insurance Fund (collectively, “insurers”).
The NYDFS adopted the AI Circular Letter with several changes from the Proposed Circular Letter, including:
The NYDFS declined to make changes to the requirements for board and senior management oversight, stating that the AI Circular Letter maintains the expectation that both senior management and the board have a responsibility for the overall outcome but not day-to-day implementation. The NYDFS described this expectation as consistent with its long-standing supervisory approach. The NYDFS also declined to make changes to the requirements for oversight of third-party vendors, again stating that the third-party oversight requirements in the AI Circular Letter were consistent with its long-standing supervisory approach.
The AI Circular Letter sets out specific fairness principles that insurers must adhere to in the use of ECDIS or AIS for underwriting and/or pricing:
The AI Circular Letter requires an insurer using ECDIS or AIS in underwriting and/or pricing to conduct a comprehensive assessment to determine that such use would not be unfairly or unlawfully discriminatory in violation of the New York Insurance Law. The AI Circular Letter sets out a three-step process for such a comprehensive assessment:
To demonstrate compliance with the above requirements, the AI Circular Letter requires insurers to conduct this assessment before an AIS is launched and on a “regular cadence thereafter” and after material updates, although the requirement that insurers appropriately document the processes and reasoning behind their testing methodologies and analysis notes that such documentation may include a description of testing conducted at least annually to assess the output of AIS models, including drift that may result from the use of machine learning or other automated updates. The AI Circular Letter encourages insurers to use multiple statistical metrics in evaluating data and model outputs. These metrics may include: adverse impact ratio; denials odds ratios; marginal effects; standardized mean differences; Z-tests and T-tests; and drivers of disparity.
The AI Circular Letter notes that an existing NYDFS regulation (Insurance Regulation 215) requires an insurer to have a corporate governance framework that is appropriate for the nature, scale, and complexity of the insurer. It then goes on to describe key expectations for an insurer’s governance and risk management framework with respect to ECDIS and AIS:
The AI Circular Letter provides that “[s]enior management is responsible for day-to-day implementation of the insurer’s development and management of ECDIS and AIS, consistent with the board’s or other governing body’s strategic vision and risk appetite.” Senior management can meet the foregoing requirement by:
The AI Circular Letter also provides that the ultimate responsibility for proper use of ECDIS or AIS rests with the insurers, even if such ECDIS or AIS was developed or deployed by third-party vendors. As noted above, insurers are required to maintain appropriate written policies and procedures regarding the use of third-party vendors in connection with the use of ECDIS and AIS developed or deployed by a third-party vendor. Insurers are also required to maintain procedures for reporting any incorrect information to third-party vendors for further investigation and update, as necessary, and to remediate and eliminate incorrect information from their AIS that the insurer has identified or has been reported to a third-party vendor. Finally, where appropriate and available, insurers should include terms in their contracts with third-party vendors that: (i) provide audit rights or entitle the insurer to receive audit reports by qualified auditing entities; and (ii) require the third-party vendor to cooperate with the insurer regarding regulatory inquiries and investigations related to the insurer’s use of the third-party vendor’s product or services.
The AI Circular Letter also reminds insurers that the failure to adequately disclose to an insured or potential insured any specific reason or reasons for its refusal of coverage, limitation of coverage, or charging a different rate for coverage may be deemed an unfair trade practice. When an insurer is using ECDIS and/or AIS, the notice regarding an adverse underwriting or pricing decision is expected to include the following:
The AI Circular Letter warns that failure to disclose such information could constitute an unfair trade practice under Article 24 of the New York Insurance Law, and that an insurer may not rely on the proprietary nature of a third-party vendor’s algorithmic processes to justify the lack of specificity in such an adverse decision notice. Also, to the extent that an accelerated underwriting process is available only to certain persons, an insurer must disclose the objective criteria for using the accelerated process in writing in a clear and prominent manner in all relevant advertisements and marketing materials, and in disclosures provided to consumers during an application process. Further, if the accelerated process determines that an applicant will not be approved for insurance under the accelerated process, and can only obtain insurance by submitting to the traditional underwriting process, the reason for such a decision must be disclosed to the applicant within 15 days of such determination.
Adoption of the AI Circular Letter by the NYDFS is one of the most expansive efforts by a US insurance regulator to regulate the use of ECDIS and AIS by insurers in terms of the level of detailed requirements it imposes. Previously, on September 21, 2023, the Colorado Division of Insurance (“COI”) adopted a first-of-its-kind regulation in the US establishing governance and risk management requirements for life insurers that use ECDIS or algorithms or predictive models that use ECDIS, which regulation became effective on November 14, 2023;1 the COI also released a draft proposed regulation on September 27, 2023, on Quantitative Testing of External Consumer Data and Information Sources, Algorithms, and Predictive Models Used for Life Insurance Underwriting for Unfairly Discriminatory Outcomes, but that draft remains subject to further consideration and has not been adopted yet.2 Meanwhile, other states have proceeded with the adoption of the model bulletin regarding the “Use of Artificial Intelligence Systems in Insurance” adopted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners in December 2023. As of June 30, 2024, 12 states and the District of Columbia have adopted the model bulletin. We will continue to monitor and report on states’ adoption of guidance regarding use of artificial intelligence in insurance.
1 See Colorado Adopts Artificial Intelligence Regulation for Life Insurers | Insights | Mayer Brown.
2 See Colorado Releases Draft Regulation on AI Testing for Life Insurers | Insights | Mayer Brown
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