Requires the Bureau of Industry and Security to integrate AI, machine learning, and advanced tools into IT systems. Mandates data fusion and analytics for export controls. Enhances data sharing and security. Allocates $25 million annually through 2028 for modernization.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act from the United States Congress with mandatory language, specific appropriations, and legal obligations for the Bureau of Industry and Security.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with limited focus on AI system security (2.2) and competitive dynamics (6.4). The document primarily addresses IT modernization and export controls rather than comprehensive AI risk management. Coverage is concentrated in security infrastructure and geopolitical competition aspects.
This document primarily governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) and National Security sectors, as it regulates the operations and IT modernization of a federal government agency (Bureau of Industry and Security) responsible for export controls and national security functions. The document does not directly regulate private sector activities but rather governs how a government agency uses AI/ML tools in its regulatory and security functions.
The document primarily addresses the deployment and operational monitoring of AI/ML systems within the Bureau's IT infrastructure. It focuses on integrating AI capabilities into existing systems for export control purposes, with emphasis on ongoing modernization through 2029.
The document explicitly mentions AI and machine learning as technologies to be incorporated into Bureau IT systems. It does not define specific AI model types, compute thresholds, or distinguish between different categories of AI systems. The focus is on practical integration of AI/ML tools for export control purposes.
United States Congress
The document is an Act of Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure. Congress is the proposing authority for this legislation.
United States Congress; Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security
Congress enforces through appropriations control and oversight. The Under Secretary has direct implementation authority and must consult with Congress on personnel needs.
United States Congress; Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security
Congress maintains monitoring authority through consultation requirements and appropriations oversight. The Under Secretary must reassess staffing and consult with Congress throughout the modernization process.
Bureau of Industry and Security of the Department of Commerce; Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security
The Act directly targets the Bureau of Industry and Security, requiring it to modernize its IT systems and adopt AI/ML capabilities. The Under Secretary is specifically obligated to carry out the modernization.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)