Requires the Administrator of the Office of Electronic Government, in consultation with key defense, intelligence and declassification officials, to research and report on AI and machine learning solutions for efficient classification and declassification.
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 with mandatory requirements, enforcement mechanisms, and specific obligations imposed on federal agencies and officials.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only subdomain 2.2 (AI system security vulnerabilities) receiving a coverage score of 2. The document primarily focuses on government classification/declassification processes and only tangentially mentions AI/ML as a potential technological solution for these processes. It does not substantively address AI risks, harms, or safety concerns.
This document primarily governs Public Administration (federal agencies) and National Security sectors. It does not regulate private sector AI development or deployment, but rather focuses on government classification processes with a brief mention of researching AI/ML solutions for these internal government functions.
The document does not substantively govern AI development or deployment. It mentions AI/ML only as a potential technological tool to be researched for supporting classification/declassification systems. The primary focus is on government information classification processes, not AI lifecycle stages.
The document mentions AI and machine learning only once, in the context of researching potential technological solutions for classification/declassification systems. It does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or any specific types of AI. No compute thresholds, model types, or technical AI specifications are mentioned.
United States Congress, United States Senate
The document is an Act of Congress, as indicated by the legislative structure and Senate findings. The Senate explicitly states findings and sense of the Senate in Section 3.
Agency heads, Director of the Information Security Oversight Office, President, Director of National Intelligence, Public Interest Declassification Board
The Act designates agency heads as responsible for ensuring compliance with classification requirements. The Information Security Oversight Office and other oversight bodies have monitoring and enforcement roles.
Information Security Oversight Office, Public Interest Declassification Board, Director of National Intelligence, Congress
The Act establishes multiple oversight bodies to monitor implementation, including the Information Security Oversight Office and the Public Interest Declassification Board. Congress receives reports on implementation and compliance.
Federal agencies, Office of Electronic Government, Secretary of Defense, Director of Central Intelligence Agency, Director of National Intelligence, agency heads with classification authority, government contractors, licensees, certificate holders, grantees
The Act applies to federal agencies and their personnel with classification authority, as well as government contractors. Section 8 specifically targets the Administrator of the Office of Electronic Government to research AI/ML solutions, in consultation with defense and intelligence officials.
1 subdomain (1 Minimal)