Establishes the National AI Commission, an independent and bi-partisan commission in the legislative branch responsible for reviewing and recommending measures to mitigate AI risks and protect US leadership in AI development
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act passed by the United States Congress establishing a National AI Commission with specific mandates, composition requirements, timelines, and reporting obligations. The document uses mandatory language throughout and creates legally enforceable obligations.
The document has minimal to no specific coverage of individual risk subdomains. While it broadly references 'risks and possible harms of artificial intelligence' and mentions developing risk-based regulatory approaches, it does not explicitly address specific risk categories from the taxonomy. The document is procedural, establishing a commission structure rather than detailing specific AI risks or mitigation measures.
This document does not govern specific economic sectors. It establishes a commission to review federal AI oversight across all sectors and recommend comprehensive regulatory frameworks. The Commission's work will span all sectors where AI is used, but the Act itself does not impose sector-specific governance measures.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather establishes a commission to review and recommend regulatory approaches across all stages. It implicitly covers all lifecycle stages through its mandate to review federal AI oversight comprehensively and develop risk-based regulatory frameworks.
The document uses general terminology referring to 'artificial intelligence' and 'artificial intelligence systems' without defining specific technical categories. It mentions 'powerful artificial intelligence systems with a general purpose' but does not explicitly define frontier AI, foundation models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress (specifically Mr. Lieu, Mr. Buck, and Ms. Eshoo as introducing representatives)
The document is a Congressional bill introduced by specific members of the House of Representatives, establishing it as proposed by legislative actors with governance authority.
United States Congress, committees of Congress of jurisdiction and appropriate investigative authorities
Congress maintains enforcement authority through oversight of the Commission's activities and is notified if the Commission cannot obtain necessary information. The Commission itself has authority to request information from federal entities.
The National AI Commission, United States Congress, the President
The Commission is established to monitor and review federal AI oversight approaches. Congress and the President receive reports from the Commission, enabling them to monitor the Commission's work and the state of AI governance.
Federal departments, agencies, commissions, offices, and other entities; the National AI Commission itself
The Act primarily targets federal government entities that will be subject to the Commission's review and must provide information to it. The Commission itself is also a target as it must fulfill specific mandates.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)