Encourages AI-related programs and initiatives to enhance US competitiveness and to promote greater AI adoption across the Federal Government.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a Congressional Act with binding legal obligations on federal agencies, using mandatory language ('shall') throughout and establishing specific requirements, timelines, and reporting obligations with legal force.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with limited focus on privacy/security (2.1, 2.2), governance (6.5), and system safety (7.3, 7.4). Most coverage is implicit through procedural requirements rather than explicit risk mitigation. The document primarily focuses on AI adoption and modernization rather than comprehensive risk management.
This document primarily governs AI use within Public Administration (federal agencies) and National Security (with some exclusions). It does not regulate private sector activities but rather focuses on federal government adoption and use of AI across various government functions including supply chain, logistics, financial management, and program integrity.
The document addresses multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages through inventory requirements, pilot programs, and ongoing oversight. It also covers Plan and Design through policy development requirements, and Build and Use Model through procurement and development guidance. Verify and Validate is addressed through risk evaluation requirements.
The document explicitly defines and covers AI systems and artificial intelligence broadly. It does not specifically mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, or compute thresholds. It focuses on applied AI capabilities and commercially available technologies without distinguishing between generative, predictive, or other AI types.
United States Congress
This is a Congressional Act (subtitle of a larger bill) proposed and enacted by the United States Congress as indicated by the legislative format and structure.
Office of Management and Budget (Director), Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security, Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, Congressional committees (Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate, Committee on Oversight and Reform of the House, Committee on Homeland Security of the House)
The Director of OMB has primary enforcement authority through guidance issuance and agency oversight. Inspectors General provide oversight and audit functions. Congressional committees receive briefings and reports for oversight purposes.
Office of Management and Budget (Director), Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security, Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, Pandemic Response Accountability Committee, Congressional committees (appropriate congressional committees as defined)
The Director of OMB monitors implementation through required briefings and inventory reviews. Inspectors General monitor agency AI use and governance practices. Congressional committees receive regular briefings and reports for oversight monitoring.
Federal agencies (as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502), Department of Homeland Security, Office of Management and Budget, General Services Administration, intelligence community (excluded), Department of Defense (excluded for certain provisions)
The Act primarily targets federal agencies that acquire, develop, or use AI systems. It explicitly applies to agencies as defined in federal law, with specific requirements for DHS and OMB, while excluding intelligence community and DoD from certain provisions.
7 subdomains (7 Minimal)