Amends the Inspector General Act to require detailed descriptions of communications between government entities and internet services, covering issues like content moderation and AI-related factors such as data inputs, algorithms, and analysis tools.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by Congress that amends the Inspector General Act of 1978, creating mandatory reporting requirements with legal force.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with limited focus on governance failure (6.5) and transparency (7.4). The Act primarily addresses procedural transparency in government communications rather than directly addressing AI risks or harms. Coverage is concentrated in governance and system transparency domains.
The document primarily governs the Information sector (internet services, content providers) and Public Administration (government establishments and Inspector Generals). It creates transparency requirements for communications between these sectors regarding content moderation and AI-related technologies.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather on transparency and reporting of government communications about AI systems. It implicitly touches on the Operate and Monitor stage by requiring reporting on communications about deployed systems' algorithms, data inputs, and analysis tools.
The document does not explicitly define AI models or systems but implicitly covers AI-related technologies through references to algorithms, modeling and simulation processes, and analysis tools used by internet services. It does not mention specific AI categories like frontier AI, general purpose AI, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress; Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America
The document is explicitly enacted by Congress, as stated in the opening clause, making Congress the proposer of this legislation.
Inspector General
The Act amends the Inspector General Act, placing enforcement responsibility with Inspectors General who must include detailed descriptions of covered communications in their reports.
Inspector General
Inspectors General are responsible for monitoring and reporting on communications between government establishments and internet services, including those related to AI systems.
government establishments; internet computer service; information content provider; access software provider
The Act targets government establishments (requiring them to report communications) and internet service providers (whose communications with government are subject to reporting). Internet services that engage in content moderation and use AI tools are deployers.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)