Official name: Countering Adversarial and Malicious Partnerships at Universities and Schools Act of 2023
Prohibits Department of Defense funding to entities contracting with Chinese institutions supporting the People's Liberation Army. Denies visas to individuals from these institutions. Limits educational funding and strengthens U.S.-Taiwan partnerships for Mandarin instruction. Lowers foreign gift disclosure threshold.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a Congressional Act with binding legal obligations, mandatory prohibitions, and enforcement mechanisms through federal agencies including denial of funding and visa restrictions.
The document primarily addresses national security risks related to foreign adversarial partnerships in education and research contexts. It has good coverage of malicious actors (4.1, 4.2), competitive dynamics (6.4), and governance failure (6.5). The focus is on preventing technology transfer and protecting classified information rather than AI-specific risks.
This legislation primarily governs Educational Services and National Security sectors by restricting partnerships between U.S. educational institutions and Chinese entities supporting military activities. It also affects Scientific Research and Development Services through restrictions on DoD research funding.
The document does not explicitly address AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on restricting partnerships and funding related to Chinese institutions supporting military activities, rather than governing AI development or deployment processes. The restrictions apply broadly to research, development, testing, and evaluation activities but do not specify AI-specific lifecycle governance.
The document does not explicitly mention AI models, AI systems, or any AI-specific technical concepts. It addresses research, development, testing, and evaluation broadly without specific reference to artificial intelligence technologies or compute thresholds.
This is an Act of Congress, proposed and drafted by the legislative branch of the U.S. government as indicated by the title and structure.
Multiple federal agencies and officials are designated with enforcement authority including identification of entities, denial of funding, visa restrictions, and certification requirements.
The Director of National Intelligence is required to submit annual reports to Congressional committees, establishing ongoing monitoring and oversight mechanisms.
The Act targets multiple categories: U.S. entities that contract with Chinese institutions (developers/deployers), educational institutions receiving federal funding (affected stakeholders), and individuals from identified Chinese institutions (affected stakeholders).
5 subdomains (3 Good, 2 Minimal)