Amends the Intelligence Authorization Act to enhance intelligence community-private sector exchanges, focusing on fields like AI.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by the United States Congress as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025. It contains mandatory language throughout ('shall'), creates legally enforceable obligations on the Director of National Intelligence and intelligence community elements, and includes reporting requirements to Congressional committees.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains. It primarily addresses administrative and governance mechanisms for intelligence community talent exchanges with private sector organizations in AI and other technology fields. The only substantive risk coverage relates to organizational conflicts of interest (subdomain 6.5 Governance Failure) through provisions requiring systems to avoid, neutralize, or mitigate conflicts. There is no coverage of AI-specific risks such as discrimination, privacy breaches, misinformation, malicious use, or AI system safety failures.
This document primarily governs the National Security sector by establishing talent exchange programs for intelligence community elements. It also indirectly affects multiple private sectors (Information, Finance, Scientific Research and Development Services, Professional and Technical Services, Health Care) by enabling exchanges with private-sector organizations in fields including AI, computing, cybersecurity, biotechnology, finance, and acquisition.
The document does not directly address specific AI lifecycle stages. It establishes a talent exchange program between intelligence community elements and private-sector organizations in AI and other technology fields, but does not govern the development, deployment, or monitoring of AI systems themselves. The focus is on workforce development and knowledge transfer rather than AI system lifecycle management.
The document mentions artificial intelligence as one of several focus areas for talent exchanges but does not define or regulate AI models, systems, or specific AI technologies. It is a workforce development and talent exchange program rather than AI-specific governance.
United States Congress
The document is Section 6506 of the 'Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025,' which is federal legislation enacted by the United States Congress.
Director of National Intelligence; heads of intelligence community elements; congressional intelligence committees; Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
The Director of National Intelligence and heads of intelligence community elements are responsible for implementing the policies and managing conflicts of interest. Congressional committees provide oversight through annual reporting requirements.
congressional intelligence committees; Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives; Director of National Intelligence
Congressional committees monitor implementation through annual reports from the Director of National Intelligence covering implementation of policies, use of authorities, and recommendations for improvements.
Director of National Intelligence; intelligence community elements; private-sector organizations in fields including artificial intelligence, computing, cybersecurity, biotechnology, finance, acquisition, business process innovation and entrepreneurship, materials and manufacturing
The document applies to intelligence community elements and their exchanges with private-sector organizations in AI and related technology fields. It regulates both government intelligence agencies and private sector entities participating in talent exchange programs.
3 subdomains (3 Minimal)