Establishes a pilot program to expedite patent examination for AI and other emerging technologies, encouraging U.S. innovation and leadership. Permits fee waivers and limits application numbers. Terminates after issuing certain patents or accepting 10,000 applications, with possible renewal.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by the U.S. Congress establishing a mandatory pilot program with specific legal requirements and obligations for the USPTO Director.
This document has minimal to no coverage of AI risk domains. It is a procedural patent law focused on expediting patent examination for AI and other emerging technologies. It does not address AI risks, harms, safety measures, or governance of AI systems themselves. The only potential connection is to competitive dynamics (6.4) through its goal of encouraging U.S. innovation leadership, though this is implicit rather than addressing risks from competitive pressures.
This document does not govern AI use within specific economic sectors. Instead, it establishes a patent examination process that applies to patent applicants across all sectors who are developing AI and other emerging technologies. The governance is of the patent system itself, not of AI deployment in any particular industry.
The document does not govern the AI lifecycle stages of development, deployment, or operation. Instead, it establishes a patent examination process for AI inventions, which occurs parallel to but separate from the AI system lifecycle. The focus is on intellectual property protection rather than AI system governance.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence as one of the eligible critical or emerging technologies but provides only a reference to an external definition. It does not mention AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on patent applications for AI inventions rather than technical AI governance.
United States Congress; Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America
The document is enacted by Congress as indicated in the opening clause, making Congress the proposer of this legislation.
United States Patent and Trademark Office; Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the Office; Congress
The USPTO Director is the primary enforcer responsible for implementing the pilot program, establishing processes, and ensuring compliance with requirements. Congress serves as an oversight enforcer through reporting requirements and notification mechanisms.
United States Patent and Trademark Office; Congress; public (through transparency requirements)
The USPTO Director monitors the program through data collection and public reporting. Congress monitors through mandatory reports and renewal notifications. The public can monitor through publicly available information on the USPTO website.
United States Patent and Trademark Office; Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office; patent applicants for AI and emerging technologies
The Act primarily targets the USPTO Director who must establish and operate the pilot program. Secondary targets are patent applicants (entities incorporated in the U.S. or inventors residing in the U.S.) who develop AI and other emerging technologies and seek expedited patent examination.