Directs the Secretary of Commerce and the Federal Trade Commission to complete studies on the AI industry and supply chain, assess risks of exploitation and online harms, and provide recommendations on AI adoption.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act from the United States Congress that mandates specific studies and reports with clear deadlines and enforcement through appropriations requirements.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with brief mentions of approximately 5-6 subdomains. Primary focus is on malicious actors (4.1, 4.2, 4.3) through the online harms study, supply chain security (2.2), and competitive dynamics (6.4). Coverage is concentrated in the study requirements for online harms and supply chain exploitation risks, but lacks detailed governance measures or mitigations.
This Act does not directly govern specific sectors but rather mandates studies across multiple sectors that implement AI and other emerging technologies. The studies will examine AI adoption across various industries including manufacturing, information/telecommunications, finance, healthcare, and others. The governance is of federal agencies conducting research, not of the sectors themselves.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather mandates studies to assess the state of AI and other emerging technologies. The studies will examine existing implementations and future adoption across all lifecycle stages, but the Act itself does not govern specific lifecycle stages.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence throughout and requires comprehensive studies of the AI industry. It does not define or distinguish between different types of AI systems (frontier, general purpose, task-specific, etc.) or mention compute thresholds. The focus is on AI as a broad technology category.
United States Congress
This is an Act of Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure. The document is titled as an Act and contains sections typical of Congressional legislation.
Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Science, Space, and Technology; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; Select Committee on Intelligence
Congressional committees are designated as the oversight bodies that receive reports and monitor compliance. Enforcement is through Congressional oversight and appropriations control.
Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Science, Space, and Technology; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; Select Committee on Intelligence
The same Congressional committees that receive the reports also serve as monitoring bodies to evaluate implementation and effectiveness of the studies. Public disclosure requirements also enable broader monitoring.
Secretary of Commerce; Federal Trade Commission; Department of Commerce
The Act directs federal agencies to conduct studies and submit reports. The primary targets are the Secretary of Commerce and the Federal Trade Commission who must complete the required studies.
11 subdomains (11 Minimal)