Encourages AI innovation by removing regulations, revising funding based on states' AI climate, and reviewing FTC actions. Promotes free speech in AI systems, revises procurement guidelines, and evaluates international AI models. Supports open-source AI use, workforce retraining, and safeguards against deepfakes. Advances AI infrastructure development, cybersecurity, international diplomacy, and semiconductor manufacturing. Prioritizes AI R&D, interpretability, evaluations, national security assessments, and biosecurity measures.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a Federal government policy action plan that outlines recommended policy actions across multiple agencies. It uses predominantly directive language ('should', 'must', 'will') but lacks formal enforcement mechanisms, penalties, or binding legal obligations. It represents executive branch policy guidance rather than hard law or purely voluntary soft law.
The document has good coverage of approximately 10-12 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.2, 4.3), AI system security (2.2), competitive dynamics (6.4), governance failure (6.5), and AI safety failures (7.1, 7.2, 7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in security, misuse prevention, national security, and AI safety domains, with minimal attention to discrimination, privacy, or socioeconomic impacts.
This Federal government action plan governs AI use across multiple sectors, with strongest coverage in Public Administration (Federal agencies), National Security (DOD, IC), Information (AI developers, telecommunications), and Scientific Research and Development. It also addresses Healthcare, Education, Finance, Professional Services, and Manufacturing through specific policy actions and regulatory guidance.
Federal government; Trump Administration; Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP); Office of Management and Budget (OMB); National Science and Technology Council (NSTC)
The document is a Federal government action plan proposed by the Trump Administration, with coordination led by OSTP and OMB across multiple Federal agencies.
Office of Management and Budget (OMB); Federal Trade Commission (FTC); Department of Commerce (DOC); National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST); Department of Defense (DOD); Department of Homeland Security (DHS); Food and Drug Administration (FDA); Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); Federal Communications Commission (FCC); Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI); Department of Justice (DOJ)
Multiple Federal agencies are designated as enforcers with specific authorities including OMB for regulatory oversight, FTC for investigations, DOC/NIST for standards, DOD for defense applications, DHS for cybersecurity, and regulatory agencies like FDA and SEC for sector-specific enforcement.
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST); Center for AI Standards and Innovation (CAISI); Department of Commerce (DOC); Department of Labor (DOL); Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS); Census Bureau; Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA); AI Workforce Research Hub; Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer Council (CAIOC); Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI); Department of Homeland Security (DHS); AI Information Sharing and Analysis Center (AI-ISAC)
Monitoring responsibilities are distributed across multiple agencies with NIST/CAISI leading AI system evaluations, DOL/BLS monitoring workforce impacts, CAIOC coordinating interagency AI adoption, and DHS/AI-ISAC monitoring security threats. The document establishes new monitoring bodies like the AI Workforce Research Hub.
frontier large language model (LLM) developers; startups; hyperscalers; leading technology companies; Federal agencies; states; businesses; cloud service providers; semiconductor manufacturing facilities; data centers; American AI developers; nucleic acid synthesis providers
The document targets multiple entity types including AI developers (especially frontier model developers), Federal agencies implementing AI, infrastructure providers (hyperscalers, cloud providers), and states with AI regulations. It also targets businesses adopting AI and specific sectors like semiconductor manufacturing.
13 subdomains (9 Good, 4 Minimal)