Include AI challenges in the President's democracy strategy within 180 days, focusing on digital security, countering disinformation, and AI-related democracy threats. Allocate funds for digital security and counter-disinformation initiatives as part of broader democracy programs.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding appropriations act passed by the United States Congress with mandatory funding allocations, specific requirements for the President and executive agencies, and legally enforceable obligations.
The document has minimal coverage of approximately 3-4 subdomains, with focus on disinformation and misinformation (4.1), information pollution (3.2), and potentially toxic content (1.2) through its emphasis on countering disinformation and protecting democratic processes. Coverage is concentrated in malicious actors and misinformation domains, with implicit references to AI-related democracy threats.
This document does not govern AI use within specific economic sectors. Instead, it appropriates funds for democracy programs that will address AI-related challenges to democracy globally, including digital security and countering disinformation. The governance is focused on foreign assistance and democracy promotion rather than regulating AI use in particular industries.
The document does not directly address specific AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on funding democracy programs that will address AI-related challenges to democracy, including digital security and countering disinformation, but does not specify governance measures for AI development, deployment, or monitoring stages.
The document mentions artificial intelligence only in the context of challenges to democracy that need to be addressed through democracy programs. It does not define or distinguish between different types of AI systems, models, or technical specifications.
United States Congress
This is an appropriations act passed by the United States Congress, which has the constitutional authority to appropriate federal funds and set conditions on their use.
United States Congress; appropriate congressional committees
Congress enforces compliance through its appropriations power, oversight authority, and mandatory reporting requirements. Congressional committees receive reports and consultations to monitor implementation.
United States Congress; appropriate congressional committees; Secretary of State; USAID Administrator
Congressional committees monitor implementation through required reports and consultations. The Secretary of State and USAID Administrator also have monitoring roles for determining government interference and coordinating with NED.
President of the United States; Department of State; United States Agency for International Development (USAID); Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor; National Endowment for Democracy (NED); United States Agency for Global Media; Secretary of State; USAID Administrator; Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor; Assistant Administrator for Development, Democracy, and Innovation
The document targets executive branch agencies and officials who must implement democracy programs, allocate funds, develop strategies, and report to Congress. It also targets organizations like NED that receive and implement democracy funding.
3 subdomains (3 Minimal)