Requires the Institute to promote international collaboration on e-governance, incorporate emerging technologies like AI, ensure compliance with standards, and restrict data sharing with specific countries to protect privacy and security. Authorizes funding and technical assistance for partner countries.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative instrument enacted by the United States Congress with mandatory language and enforcement mechanisms establishing legal obligations for the Institute.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with brief mentions of privacy and security concerns (2.1, 2.2), governance structures (6.5), and competitive dynamics (6.4). The primary focus is on establishing governance frameworks and international cooperation rather than addressing specific AI risks in detail.
The document primarily governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) through e-governance systems for government services. It also has significant coverage of Information sector through data processing and telecommunications infrastructure, and Professional and Technical Services through IT consulting and technical assistance.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Plan and Design (developing frameworks and standards), Deploy (implementing e-governance systems), and Operate and Monitor (ongoing oversight and auditing). It also addresses Build and Use Model through incorporation of emerging AI technologies.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence as an emerging technology to be incorporated into e-governance systems. It does not define specific AI model types, compute thresholds, or distinguish between different categories of AI systems. The focus is on AI as one of several emerging technologies to be accounted for in governance frameworks.
United States Congress
The document is identified as enacted by the United States Congress, which is the legislative authority that proposed and enacted this legislation.
The Institute
The Institute is granted explicit authority to enforce procurement restrictions, prohibit contracts and data sharing with specified countries, and ensure compliance with the e-governance framework.
The Institute; certified organizations for auditing and penetration testing
The Institute is responsible for monitoring compliance through certification of auditing organizations and accountability mechanisms for funding. The document also references auditing and penetration testing as monitoring mechanisms.
The Institute; Americas partner countries; private sector entities; organizations carrying out auditing and penetration testing
The document applies to the Institute (which must perform specified duties), Americas partner countries (which receive assistance and must comply with the e-governance framework), private sector entities (which may partner with the Institute), and certification organizations for auditing.