Requires the Secretary of Commerce to conduct an AI awareness and education campaign. Involves evaluating effectiveness with key performance indicators, promoting best practices, and targeting vulnerable populations against AI-enabled fraud. Mandates reporting to Congress within one year.
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 obligations imposed on the Secretary of Commerce, including specific timelines for implementation and reporting requirements to Congress.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with primary focus on malicious actors (4.3 - fraud and scams) through targeted outreach to vulnerable populations. There is implicit minimal coverage of misinformation (3.1) through deepfake detection education, and human-computer interaction (5.1) through general AI awareness. The document is primarily educational rather than risk-mitigating, focusing on public awareness rather than direct governance of AI risks.
This document does not govern AI use in specific economic sectors. Instead, it mandates a federal public awareness campaign about AI that will discuss AI applications across multiple sectors (including productivity tools, commercial applications, and fraud detection). The governed entity is the federal government itself (Public Administration), which must conduct the education campaign.
The document does not govern specific AI lifecycle stages for AI development or deployment. Instead, it mandates a public education campaign about AI that discusses AI applications across various lifecycle stages (particularly deployment and operation) but does not regulate those stages themselves. The focus is on public awareness rather than technical governance.
The document explicitly mentions 'artificial intelligence' broadly and references various AI applications (deepfakes, chatbots, automated decision-making) but does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or specific categories like frontier AI, GPAI, or foundation models. It focuses on AI applications in general without technical categorization.
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 federal legislation.
United States Congress; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives
Congress serves as the enforcer through oversight mechanisms, specifically the relevant congressional committees that receive mandatory reports on campaign activities and effectiveness.
Secretary of Commerce; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives
The Secretary of Commerce is responsible for monitoring the campaign's effectiveness through key performance indicators, while Congress monitors overall implementation through required reporting.
Secretary of Commerce; National Institute of Standards and Technology; National Telecommunications and Information Administration; Federal agencies
The Act primarily targets federal government entities, specifically the Secretary of Commerce and related federal agencies, who are required to conduct the AI awareness campaign. The ultimate beneficiaries are the general public, but the regulatory targets are government agencies.
3 subdomains (3 Minimal)