Require the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct annual assessments of terrorism threats involving generative AI. Task DHS with analyzing the use of generative AI by terrorists for radicalization and weapon development. Instruct to coordinate and share findings, protecting rights and privacy.
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, specified enforcement mechanisms, and legal obligations on the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct annual assessments and submit reports to congressional committees.
The document has good coverage of approximately 5-6 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.2), AI system security (2.2), governance (6.5), and AI safety failures (7.2, 7.3). Coverage is concentrated in security, misuse prevention, and governance oversight domains.
This document primarily governs the Public Administration and National Security sectors, requiring government agencies (DHS, ODNI) to assess terrorism threats involving generative AI. It does not directly regulate private sector AI development or deployment.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather on monitoring and assessing the use of already-deployed generative AI applications by terrorist organizations. It primarily addresses the operational monitoring of AI systems in malicious use contexts.
The document explicitly defines and focuses on generative artificial intelligence applications, specifically those that generate synthetic content including images, videos, audio, text, and other digital content. It does not mention AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress; Senate; House of Representatives
The document is a bill proposed by the United States Congress, as indicated by the opening text 'Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled'.
Committee on Homeland Security; Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; Select Committee on Intelligence; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Congressional committees are designated as the enforcement bodies through their oversight role, receiving mandatory assessments, briefings, and having the authority to determine appropriate participation in briefings.
Committee on Homeland Security; Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; Select Committee on Intelligence; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; Office of the General Counsel; Privacy Office; Office of for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
The same congressional committees that enforce also monitor through receiving annual assessments and briefings. Additionally, internal DHS offices (General Counsel, Privacy Office, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties) coordinate to ensure compliance with applicable law and protection of rights.
Secretary of Homeland Security; Department of Homeland Security; Director of National Intelligence; Office of the Director of National Intelligence
The primary target is the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Department of Homeland Security, who are required to conduct assessments and coordinate with the Director of National Intelligence. The document also targets State and local fusion centers for information sharing.
7 subdomains (4 Good, 3 Minimal)