The White House and federal agencies are treating this as a national security concern. Executive Order 14179 and the July 2025 AI Action Plan direct the Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, FTC, NIST, and other agencies to promote secure AI development, establish vulnerability-sharing protocols, and streamline standards. The National Vulnerability Database currently carries a backlog of 30,000 entries, creating a critical gap between discovery and disclosure. The precise scope of AI-generated vulnerabilities awaiting fixes remains unclear, as does the timeline for federal-industry coordination on remediation standards.
Attorneys should monitor two developments. First, liability exposure for companies deploying AI security tools—particularly around disclosure obligations and timing of patch releases when vulnerabilities are discovered at scale. Second, regulatory action: the White House initiatives signal federal intent to shape vulnerability management and AI governance, which may preempt or conflict with state-level data security laws. The convergence of a massive CVE backlog, accelerating AI-driven discovery, and federal pressure for coordinated response creates both compliance and litigation risk for software vendors and enterprises managing open-source dependencies.