Establishes a CISA Task Force to coordinate AI safety and security efforts, assess initiatives, address workforce gaps, and promote secure AI adoption. Requires biannual briefings to Congress. Ceases effect five years post-enactment.
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 with mandatory language requiring the establishment of a Task Force and specific activities, with enforcement through congressional oversight mechanisms.
The document has minimal to good coverage of approximately 5-6 subdomains, with primary focus on AI system security (2.2), competitive dynamics (6.4), governance failure (6.5), and AI safety failures (7.1, 7.2, 7.3). Coverage is concentrated in security, governance coordination, and system safety domains.
This document primarily governs AI use within the Public Administration sector, specifically within the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and Department of Homeland Security. It establishes internal governance structures for federal government AI activities related to cybersecurity and infrastructure security.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Design, Deployment, and Operation/Monitoring. It addresses coordination across the full lifecycle from design through deployment and ongoing monitoring of AI systems.
The document uses general terminology referring to 'artificial intelligence' and 'artificial intelligence-based software' without defining specific technical categories. It does not explicitly mention AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, generative AI, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress
The document is titled as an Act and follows standard Congressional legislative format, indicating it was proposed and enacted by the United States Congress.
Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate
Congressional committees are designated to receive biannual briefings and reports, providing oversight and enforcement through congressional authority.
CISA Task Force on Securing Artificial Intelligence; Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate
The Task Force itself monitors CISA's AI activities and reports to Congressional committees, which provide external monitoring through biannual briefings.
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA); Department of Homeland Security
The Act specifically directs the Director of CISA to establish a Task Force and coordinate AI safety and security efforts within the Agency and Department.
10 subdomains (2 Good, 8 Minimal)