Instructs the Small Business Administration to create and maintain AI educational resources for small businesses, ensuring accuracy and stakeholder collaboration. Requires dissemination by partners, emphasizing comprehensibility and impartiality concerning AI tools. Deadline set for establishment is 180 days post-enactment.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by the U.S. Congress with mandatory obligations on the Small Business Administration, using mandatory language ('shall') throughout and establishing specific requirements with a 180-day implementation deadline.
The document has minimal to no coverage of specific AI risk domains. While it addresses AI education for small businesses, it does not substantively cover the risks and harms described in the MIT taxonomy. The document focuses on educational resource development rather than risk mitigation or governance of specific AI harms.
This document does not govern AI use within specific economic sectors. Instead, it governs the Small Business Administration's obligation to create educational resources for small businesses across all sectors. The governance applies to a federal agency's educational and outreach activities, not to AI deployment in any particular industry.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages for AI development or deployment. Instead, it addresses the creation of educational resources about AI tools for small businesses. The lifecycle stages covered relate to how small businesses should evaluate and adopt AI tools (planning, deployment, and monitoring of AI use), rather than the development lifecycle of AI systems themselves.
The document explicitly mentions 'artificial intelligence tools' and 'artificial intelligence models' throughout. It references the definition from the National Defense Authorization Act but does not distinguish between different types of AI (frontier, general purpose, task-specific, etc.). There is no mention of compute thresholds, open-weight models, or specific AI architectures.
United States Congress; House of Representatives
The document is a federal bill passed by the House of Representatives, as indicated by the header and footer. Congress is the proposing authority for this legislation.
Small Business Administration (Administrator)
The Small Business Administration, through its Administrator, is responsible for implementing and enforcing the requirements of this Act. As a federal agency implementing statutory requirements, it serves as the enforcer.
Small Business Administration (Administrator); Advisory Working Group; National Institute of Standards and Technology (Director)
The Administrator is responsible for ongoing monitoring and maintenance of the educational resources. An Advisory Working Group is established to provide ongoing consultation, and NIST is consulted to ensure accuracy and currency of information.
Small Business Administration; small business concerns; resource partners (Small Business Development Centers, Women's Business Centers, SCORE, etc.)
The primary target is the Small Business Administration, which must establish educational resources. The secondary beneficiaries/targets are small business concerns who will use these educational resources to evaluate AI tools, and resource partners who will disseminate the information.
6 subdomains (6 Minimal)