Instructs the heads of the elements of the intelligence community to draft a potential policy to promote the intelligence community-wide use of code-free artificial intelligence enablement tools.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding statutory provision enacted by the U.S. Congress as part of the National Defense Authorization Act. It uses mandatory language ('shall') and creates legally enforceable obligations on specified government officials.
This document has minimal to no coverage of AI risk domains. It is a procedural directive instructing intelligence community leaders to draft a policy promoting code-free AI tools. It does not address specific AI risks, harms, or safety concerns from the MIT taxonomy.
This document exclusively governs the National Security sector, specifically directing intelligence community elements to develop policies for code-free AI tools. It does not regulate AI use in commercial or civilian sectors.
The document focuses primarily on the planning and design stage by requiring the drafting of a policy framework for code-free AI tools. It also addresses deployment considerations through requirements for implementation plans, timelines, and resource assessments.
The document explicitly mentions 'code-free artificial intelligence enablement tools' but does not define AI models, AI systems, or specify particular types of AI (frontier, general purpose, task-specific, etc.). No compute thresholds or model weight distribution approaches are mentioned.
United States Congress
This section is part of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023, enacted by the United States Congress as the legislative authority.
congressional intelligence committees; Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
Congressional committees are designated to receive submissions and conduct oversight, serving as the enforcement mechanism through their oversight authority.
congressional intelligence committees; Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
The same congressional committees that enforce also monitor implementation through required submissions including draft policy, feasibility assessments, implementation plans, and resource requirements.
Director of National Intelligence; Director of the Central Intelligence Agency; Director of the National Security Agency; Director of the National Reconnaissance Office; Director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency; Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency; elements of the intelligence community
The document explicitly targets the heads of intelligence community elements, requiring them to draft and submit a policy promoting code-free AI tools within their organizations.