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Trump signs AI order for pre-release government review of advanced models

Published
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14

Why it matters

President Trump signed an executive order Tuesday requiring AI companies to provide the federal government early access to their most advanced models for up to 30 days of review and testing before public release. The order frames this requirement as a safety measure, directing agencies to examine the systems for cybersecurity vulnerabilities and threats to national infrastructure. OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are the primary targets, with the administration seeking their voluntary participation in the review process.

The order represents a narrower version of a broader AI governance executive order the White House shelved last month. Key details about implementation—including how the 30-day review period will function, what triggers mandatory submission, and enforcement mechanisms for non-compliance—remain unclear. It is also uncertain whether the major AI developers will comply voluntarily or whether the administration plans to issue binding regulatory requirements.

For attorneys advising AI companies or clients in the technology sector, this signals an accelerating federal push to embed government oversight into product development timelines. The practical effect could delay model releases significantly and create new compliance obligations that lack clear statutory authority. Companies should monitor whether this executive order is followed by formal rulemaking from agencies like NIST or the Commerce Department, and whether Congress moves to codify these requirements into law. The voluntary framing may prove temporary.

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