By The Star
June 23 (Reuters) - The Trump administration β is pressing Meta to submit its AI models for voluntary review, β which would allow the government to evaluate their abilities and vulnerabilities, βthe New York Times reported on Tuesday, citing four people familiar with the confidential request.
The request was made in emails with the social media giant, the report said, as the administration steps βup oversight of the AI industry.
The Facebook parent, β which launched the Muse Spark AI β model in April, is the only major U.S. developer of AI technology that β has βnot reached an agreement to voluntarily share its models with the federal government for review, according to the report.
"We share the administration's goal β of advancing U.S. leadership on robust and secure frontier βAI. While we are βworking through the details, we hope to sign the agreement soon," β Meta told Reuters βin an emailed response.
The U.S. Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Earlier this month, the U.S. government ordered Anthropic to suspend access to β its most advanced AI models for foreign nationals, βciting national security concerns.
OpenAI and Anthropic had already been working with the U.S. government to test unreleased AI models, while Google DeepMind, Microsoft and xAI agreed in May β to provide the government early access to new models for national-security evaluations.
Concern is growing in Washington over the national security risks posed by powerful AI systems. By securing early access to frontier models, U.S. officials are aiming to identify βthreats ranging from cyberattacks to military misuse before the β tools are widely deployed.
On June 2, President Donald Trump signed an executive order βestablishing a voluntary framework for AI developers to βoffer "covered frontier models" to the U.S. government βfor up to 30 days before releasing them to trusted partners.
(Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed and Vijay Kishore)
Source: us-presses-meta-to-agree-to-ai-reviews-as-security-concerns-rise-nyt-reports
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