Requires submission of reports detailing interagency actions and progress in implementing advanced capabilities under the AUKUS agreement, including AI and autonomy. Assesses export control changes and collaboration efforts among AUKUS partners on AI and other technologies.
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 establishing mandatory reporting requirements with specific deadlines and enforcement through congressional oversight.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only implicit references to competitive dynamics (6.4) through international defense collaboration and governance structures (6.5) through export control frameworks. The document primarily focuses on reporting requirements for AUKUS implementation rather than addressing specific AI risks.
This document primarily governs National Security and Public Administration sectors through reporting requirements on the AUKUS defense partnership. It also has minimal coverage of Professional and Technical Services and Scientific Research and Development Services related to defense technology collaboration and export controls.
The document does not substantially cover specific AI lifecycle stages. It mentions AI and autonomy as one of eight trilateral lines of effort under AUKUS Pillar Two, requiring assessment of collaboration efforts, but provides no detail on development, deployment, or monitoring of AI systems.
The document mentions AI and autonomy as one line of effort but does not define or elaborate on AI models, systems, or any specific technical categories. No compute thresholds, model types, or technical specifications are discussed.
United States Congress
The document is Section 6 of the TORPEDO Act of 2023, which is a legislative act passed by the United States Congress establishing reporting requirements for AUKUS implementation.
appropriate congressional committees; United States Congress
Congressional committees enforce compliance through oversight mechanisms, receiving mandatory reports and briefings from executive branch departments to ensure AUKUS implementation reporting requirements are met.
appropriate congressional committees; United States Congress
Congressional committees monitor AUKUS implementation through required reports and annual briefings over a 7-year period, tracking progress on submarine capabilities, export controls, and advanced technology collaboration including AI.
Secretary of State; Secretary of Defense; Secretary of Commerce; Secretary of Energy; President; Department of State; Department of Defense; Department of Energy; Department of Commerce; Government of Australia; Government of the United Kingdom
The reporting requirements apply to multiple U.S. government departments and their secretaries, as well as the President. The reports also assess actions and progress by the governments of Australia and the United Kingdom in implementing AUKUS.
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