Requires the Federal Communications Commission to create an AI-based tool within one year to help the public identify likely scams. Specifies that the tool must accept various submission formats, evaluate scam likelihood, and provide a scam likelihood rating.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act from the United States Congress with mandatory requirements and specified enforcement authority through the Federal Communications Commission.
The document has minimal coverage of approximately 2-3 subdomains, with primary focus on fraud and scams (4.3), AI system security and robustness (2.2, 7.3), and potentially misinformation (3.1). Coverage is concentrated in malicious actor prevention and AI system reliability domains.
This document primarily governs the Public Administration sector by mandating the Federal Communications Commission to develop and deploy an AI tool. It does not directly regulate private sector activities but creates a public service tool that may indirectly affect Information and Professional Services sectors involved in scam prevention.
The document primarily covers the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages, as it mandates the FCC to provide a publicly accessible AI tool and implies ongoing operation. It also implicitly covers Build and Use Model and Verify and Validate stages through the requirement to create an AI-based evaluation system.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence and references the National AI Initiative Act definition. It does not specify whether the AI is generative, predictive, frontier, general purpose, or task-specific, though the scam detection function suggests task-specific predictive AI. No compute thresholds or model weight specifications are mentioned.
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.
Federal Communications Commission
While not explicitly stated, the FCC would be responsible for implementing and enforcing its own compliance with this Act, as is standard for federal agency mandates. Congress would have oversight authority.
United States Congress
Congress would maintain oversight and monitoring authority over the FCC's implementation of this Act through standard legislative oversight mechanisms, though this is not explicitly stated in the document.
Federal Communications Commission; Commission
The FCC is the primary target of this legislation, as it is required to develop and provide the AI-based scam identification tool.
4 subdomains (1 Good, 3 Minimal)