AI US and UK release guidelines for secure AI development Washington and London want developers and users of machine learning tools to devote more resources toward security. By Elias Groll November 27, 2023 Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas speaks during the daily press briefing at the White House on March 1, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images) Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Copy Link Advertisement Advertisement More Like This Lack of federal R&D support challenges AI innovation, White House official warns By Caroline Nihill Rebecca Heilweil Bipartisan Senate bill would establish federal AI acquisition guardrails By Madison Alder Bipartisan Senate bill calls on Commerce to lead AI push with small businesses By Rebecca Heilweil Advertisement Top Stories For GSA, a new step to secure the software acquisition process begins By Caroline Nihill IRS defends use of biometric verification for online FOIA filers By Rebecca Heilweil OpenAI official meets with the USAID administrator By Rebecca Heilweil VA software license assessments called out in GAO recommendations By Caroline Nihill Labor Department has ‘a leg up’ on artificial intelligence, new CAIO says By Caroline Nihill IRS dinged by GAO for subpar documentation of AI audit models By Matt Bracken Advertisement
Lack of federal R&D support challenges AI innovation, White House official warns By Caroline Nihill Rebecca Heilweil
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks during the Financial Stability Oversight Council Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Financial Stability on June 6, 2024 in Washington, D.C. During her remarks Yellen spoke on the future impact of artificial intelligence on the economy. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) Treasury seeks information on AI uses and risks in the financial sector The RFI continues an agency push for “stakeholder engagement to improve our understanding of AI in financial services,” Secretary Janet Yellen says. By Matt Bracken
David Miller (right), interim chief technology officer at the FBI, discusses how the agency is operationalizing AI at a GDIT event June 4, 2024. Ralph Tursi (left), the senior director of law enforcement at GDIT, moderated the discussion. FBI’s AI work includes ‘Shark Tank’-style idea exploration, tip line use case By Madison Alder
A view of Department of Energy headquarters on Feb. 9, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by J. David Ake/Getty Images) National lab official highlights role of government datasets in AI work By Rebecca Heilweil
AI fuels rise in attacks from ‘unsophisticated threat actors,’ federal cyber leaders say By Matt Bracken
Senate Democrat pushes for expansion to copyright act to include generative AI research By Caroline Nihill