President
The order that Trump is expected to sign would revamp existing cybersecurity information-sharing programs to include AI companies while stopping short of mandatory federal approval of cutting-edge models, Bloomberg News
Instead, it would call for voluntary government testing of frontier AI systems to find and patch weaknesses across federal, state and local networks, as well as critical US infrastructure, without requiring extensive new oversight.
Invitations have been been sent to a range of technology industry executives for a signing event Thursday at the White House, the people said, though it’s unclear who will take part.
Spokespeople for the White House had no immediate comment on Wednesday evening. Spokespeople for top AI developers
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The directive is set to be signed about a month after Anthropic revealed that its breakthrough Mythos model was extraordinarily adept at finding network vulnerabilities and could pose a major cybersecurity risk. The company has limited Mythos access for now to a handful of large tech and Wall Street companies, amid broader global alarm about the new threats it could pose to critical systems.
Trump administration officials have been pushing to make Mythos more widely available to federal agencies to test their networks for security flaws, and the National Security Agency has already been
The US already runs a voluntary program to evaluate AI systems before their release, and the Commerce Department recently announced an expansion of that initiative.
In addition to sharing its models with the Commerce Department for national security testing, OpenAI’s Chief Global Affairs Officer
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