While China seeks access to US cyber AI models, the US industry is racing to deploy these models for defensive measures quickly enough – but time is running short.
OpenAI calls for mandatory federal evaluations before AI model release but rejects regulatory approvals, positioning itself in a controlled middle ground between voluntary commitments and strict government control.
Microsoft is testing Scout, an autonomous AI agent that proactively coordinates meeting scheduling and identifies project risks — currently available only in the Frontier Program for enterprise customers.
The US government receives 30 days of advance access to new powerful AI models to benefit from their vulnerability detection, while the tech industry was spared longer exclusivity periods.
Browser-based AI attacks and uncontrolled employee use of AI tools make transparent monitoring of browser traffic a core task of modern cybersecurity governance.
The European Commission is seeking independent experts for a scientific panel on general-purpose AI; the body advises on enforcement of the EU AI Act, assesses systemic risks, and can issue warnings, with applications open until September 14.
A new policy paper analyzes two scenarios for 2028: in the first, democratic countries preserve their AI leadership through tightened export controls and faster adoption; in the second, autocracies take control. Computing power is decisive — the US must defend its technological lead.
Chris Olah lauded the papal encyclical as an important contribution to AI governance, emphasizing the need for critical external perspectives on AI development and describing AI systems as organically grown, partially mysterious structures whose impacts extend beyond computer science.