Directs the Secretary of Commerce to develop a national strategy and conduct a public campaign in collaboration with federal, state, and industry partners to enhance AI consumer literacy and promote understanding of AI capabilities and limitations for informed decision making.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a Congressional Act with binding legal obligations on the Secretary of Commerce, using mandatory language ('shall') throughout and establishing specific timelines, reporting requirements, and appropriations authority.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with primary focus on consumer education rather than specific AI risks. It has minimal coverage (score 2) of approximately 3-4 subdomains: overreliance and unsafe use (5.1), loss of agency and autonomy (5.2), fraud and manipulation (4.3), and lack of transparency (7.4). The document emphasizes consumer literacy as a preventive measure rather than directly addressing specific risk mitigation.
This document does not govern specific economic sectors but rather establishes a cross-sectoral consumer education initiative. It references multiple sectors as contexts for AI use cases (personal finance, healthcare, communication, creative works, business management) but does not impose governance requirements on these sectors. The governance applies to the Secretary of Commerce's obligation to develop consumer literacy programs.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather addresses consumer interaction with AI products and services across all stages. It emphasizes consumer literacy about AI capabilities and limitations, which is relevant to how consumers engage with deployed and operational AI systems. The primary focus is on the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages from a consumer perspective.
The document explicitly mentions AI products and services broadly but does not specifically reference AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds. It does reference various AI tasks such as classification, prediction, content generation, and autonomous decision making.
United States Congress
The document is a Congressional Act proposed and enacted by the United States Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure.
United States Congress (through oversight), Government Accountability Office
Congress enforces compliance through reporting requirements and appropriations oversight. The GAO is tasked with issuing evaluation reports on federal AI literacy programs.
Secretary of Commerce, Government Accountability Office, private or nonprofit organizations (for campaign evaluation)
The Secretary is required to conduct annual reviews of the national strategy and develop performance measures. The GAO monitors federal AI literacy programs. Private or nonprofit organizations are tasked with evaluating campaign effectiveness.
Secretary of Commerce, developers and deployers of artificial intelligence products and services, consumers (indirectly as beneficiaries)
The Act primarily targets the Secretary of Commerce with mandatory obligations to develop strategy and campaigns. It also references developers and deployers of AI products and services as having responsibilities, though they are not directly regulated by this Act. Consumers are the intended beneficiaries of the literacy campaign.
7 subdomains (7 Minimal)