Encourages the intelligence community to explore private sector partnerships for technological advancement. Expands public-private talent exchanges in AI and other fields. Extends exchange duration to five years and limits access to trade secrets. Requires annual reporting to Congress.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act passed by the United States Congress with mandatory requirements, enforcement mechanisms, and reporting obligations.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with limited focus on competitive dynamics (6.4) and governance failure (6.5). The document primarily addresses organizational and procedural matters for intelligence community partnerships rather than specific AI risks. Coverage is concentrated in socioeconomic domains related to strategic competition and governance structures.
The document primarily governs Public Administration (National Security) as it regulates intelligence community operations and partnerships. It also has minimal coverage of Professional and Technical Services, Scientific Research and Development Services, and Information sectors through its provisions for private-sector partnerships in technology fields including AI, cybersecurity, and computing.
The document does not explicitly address specific AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on organizational talent exchange programs and partnerships rather than technical AI development processes. The document mentions AI as one of several technology focus areas for personnel exchanges but does not govern AI development, deployment, or monitoring activities.
The document mentions artificial intelligence only as one of several technology fields for talent exchange programs. It does not define AI models, systems, or any specific AI technical concepts. The focus is on organizational partnerships and personnel exchanges rather than technical AI governance.
United States Congress; Senate and House of Representatives
The document is enacted by the United States Congress, as stated in the opening clause. This is a legislative act proposed and passed by the federal legislative body.
Director of National Intelligence; heads of intelligence community elements
The Director of National Intelligence is responsible for ensuring implementation of policies and procedures, while heads of intelligence community elements must implement systems to manage organizational conflicts of interest.
congressional intelligence committees; Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives; Director of National Intelligence
Congressional committees receive annual reports on implementation and administration. The Director of National Intelligence is responsible for monitoring and reporting on the program's implementation.
intelligence community; Director of National Intelligence; private-sector organizations; Office of Strategic Capital of the Office of the Secretary of Defense; Office of Domestic Finance of the Department of the Treasury
The document targets the intelligence community and its elements, requiring them to establish talent exchange programs with private-sector organizations in AI and other technology fields. Private-sector organizations in specified technology fields are also targets as participants in the exchange program.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)