Requires operators of dominant online platforms with owners (including minority owners) who are citizens of foreign adversaries of the U.S. to sequester data and algorithms from agents of any foreign entity.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative provision from the U.S. Congress with mandatory requirements, enforcement mechanisms through the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), and explicit penalties including license denial for non-compliance.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, primarily addressing national security concerns related to foreign adversary ownership and data access (subdomain 4.1). It implicitly touches on privacy/security risks (2.1, 2.2) through data sequestration requirements and governance structures (6.5) through ownership restrictions, but does not explicitly describe these as risks or harms.
The document primarily governs the Information sector, specifically operators of dominant online platforms. It addresses corporate citizenship, ownership restrictions, and data sequestration requirements for platforms with foreign adversary ownership.
The document does not explicitly address specific AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on corporate ownership and data governance requirements for dominant online platforms, which could apply across multiple lifecycle stages but does not specify particular development or deployment phases.
The document does not explicitly define or mention specific AI technical categories. It refers to 'algorithms' and 'dominant platforms' but does not specify whether these are AI systems, models, or other technical implementations. The focus is on corporate governance and data security rather than technical AI specifications.
United States Congress
The document is a section of the Digital Consumer Protection Commission Act of 2023, which is federal legislation proposed and enacted by the United States Congress.
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS); Office of Licensing for Dominant Platforms; National Security Division of the Department of Justice
CFIUS is designated to review and investigate applications from foreign persons, with authority to recommend license denial. The Office of Licensing for Dominant Platforms has authority to deny licenses based on CFIUS determinations.
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS)
CFIUS is tasked with reviewing and investigating applications to ensure compliance with national security requirements, effectively monitoring foreign ownership and control of dominant platforms.
operators of dominant platforms; subsidiary corporations of dominant platform operators
The document explicitly targets operators of dominant online platforms, particularly those with foreign adversary ownership, requiring them to meet citizenship requirements and sequester data from foreign access.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)