Amends the Defense Production Act to restrict U.S. persons from engaging in covered activities involving AI and other sectors with countries of concern. Requires notification of certain activities, mandates regulations, and authorizes penalties for violations.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative amendment to the Defense Production Act with mandatory prohibitions, notification requirements, civil and criminal penalties, and enforcement mechanisms through the Attorney General and federal courts.
The document has good coverage of approximately 8-10 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.2), AI system security (2.2), competitive dynamics (6.4), governance (6.5), and dangerous capabilities (7.2). Coverage is concentrated in security, misuse prevention, national security, and geopolitical competition domains.
This document governs multiple high-technology sectors with national security implications, with explicit coverage of Information (AI, semiconductors, satellite communications), Scientific Research and Development Services (AI research, quantum technology, hypersonics), and Professional and Technical Services (technology development and consulting). The regulation applies broadly across sectors where U.S. persons might engage with countries of concern in sensitive technology development.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages through mandatory notification requirements and ongoing oversight. It also addresses Build and Use Model through restrictions on joint development and technology transfer, and Plan and Design through prohibitions on establishing facilities and joint ventures for AI development in countries of concern.
The document explicitly mentions AI as a covered sector but does not define AI models, AI systems, or provide technical distinctions between types of AI. It does not reference frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI as a broad technology category subject to national security controls.
United States Congress
The document is titled 'Combat Chinese Economic Aggression Act of 2024' and is structured as a Congressional amendment to the Defense Production Act, indicating it is proposed legislation by the U.S. Congress.
The President of the United States, Attorney General, lead agency (to be designated by President)
The President is granted authority to prescribe regulations, prohibit activities, and delegate enforcement. The Attorney General has explicit enforcement authority through federal courts. A lead agency will be designated to administer the title.
The President, lead agency, appropriate congressional committees (Committee on Foreign Affairs, Committee on Financial Services, Committee on Ways and Means, Committee on Appropriations, Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House; Committee on Foreign Relations, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, Committee on Finance, Committee on Appropriations, Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate), Secretary of State
The President and lead agency are responsible for receiving and reviewing notifications, identifying non-notified activities, and submitting annual reports to Congress. Congressional committees receive annual reports on implementation and effectiveness. The Secretary of State reports on multilateral coordination efforts.
United States persons engaging in covered activities with covered foreign entities in countries of concern (Democratic People's Republic of North Korea, People's Republic of China including Hong Kong and Macau, Russian Federation, Islamic Republic of Iran)
The document explicitly targets 'United States persons' who engage in covered activities involving AI and other sensitive technologies with entities in countries of concern. This includes developers, deployers, and infrastructure providers engaging in equity investments, joint ventures, technology transfer, and operational cooperation.
6 subdomains (5 Good, 1 Minimal)