Establishes the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource (NAIRR) to democratize AI research by providing resources. Directs the NAIRR Steering Subcommittee under the Office of Science and Technology Policy to oversee operations. Sets procedures for privacy, ethics, security, and user eligibility. Defines funding mechanisms and governance structures.
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 language establishing legal obligations, enforcement mechanisms, and formal governance structures for the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with limited focus on privacy (2.1), security vulnerabilities (2.2), and governance structures (6.5). Coverage is primarily concentrated on establishing infrastructure and access controls rather than addressing specific AI risks and harms. Most risk subdomains receive no coverage as the document focuses on democratizing AI research access rather than mitigating AI-related risks.
This document primarily governs the Scientific Research and Development Services sector and Educational Services sector by establishing infrastructure for AI research and education. It also has minimal coverage of Public Administration (excluding National Security) through federal agency participation requirements.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Build and Use Model, Deploy, and Operate and Monitor stages. It establishes infrastructure for AI model development, testing, deployment support, and ongoing monitoring through the NAIRR platform.
The document broadly references 'artificial intelligence' throughout without defining specific AI types. It does not explicitly distinguish between AI models vs systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, or open-weight models. No compute thresholds are mentioned.
United States Congress (Senate and House of Representatives)
The document is a Congressional bill proposed by the legislative branch of the United States government, as indicated by the formal enactment clause and legislative structure.
National Science Foundation, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Program Management Office, NAIRR Steering Subcommittee, Operating Entity, Director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
Multiple federal agencies and offices are designated with enforcement and oversight authority, including the NSF which establishes the Program Management Office, and OSTP which chairs the NAIRR Steering Subcommittee with oversight responsibilities.
NAIRR Steering Subcommittee, Program Management Office, Advisory Committees, Independent evaluation entity, Interagency Council on Statistical Policy, Senior Agency Official for Privacy
The document establishes multiple monitoring bodies including the NAIRR Steering Subcommittee which conducts annual performance evaluations, the Program Management Office which oversees compliance, and independent evaluation entities for periodic assessments.
Researchers, educators, students, institutions of higher education, nonprofit institutions, Executive agencies, federally funded research and development centers, small business concerns, public cloud providers, data repository operators
The document targets multiple entity types: AI researchers and developers who will use NAIRR resources, infrastructure providers who will supply computational resources and data, and governance actors (federal agencies) who will participate in the NAIRR ecosystem.
3 subdomains (1 Good, 2 Minimal)