Artificial Intelligence
Provisioning AI Into the National Defense Authorization Act: Just the Beginning
Jan 20, 2025
7
min read
Recommendations for additional provisions for the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) include requiring artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities to be embedded in several critical areas.
The House of Representatives and Senate continue creating versions of NDAA provisions. The final decisions rest with the White House and the Office of Management of Budget (OMB).
These provisions will significantly change the NDAA by optimizing various functions. Keeping track of these provisions as they come interwoven into the different national defense initiatives and workflows with various federal agencies will require a new way of thinking.
AI continues to become critical in compliance offer automation-specific policy reviews against required mandates.
With the introduction of our AI-centric platform, Tiebreaker AI is becoming critical in changing how organizations track changes to their policy documentation and the ability to monitor and adjust these documents continuously. NDAA is one of many government-focused regulations that will benefit from solutions like Tiebreaker AI.
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Key Themes of AI Integration in NDAA
The changes to the NDAA specifically request additional AI for the Department of Defense (DOD) and non-DOD agencies. Specifically, to non-DOD agencies, the OMB requires each federal agency to document all AI-related use cases specific to the NDAA for five years. The agencies also need to share these use cases with departments. This mandate doesn't apply to any DOD agencies or departments.
Within the DOD, several roadmaps for AI, including adopting new weapons systems, top secret data management systems, counter-hacking capabilities, advanced threat intelligence, and delegation of ownership of AI assets divided between various agencies, make up a good portion of the provisions currently under review.
Stay tuned. More articles on AI governance are coming soon!