AI US and UK release guidelines for secure AI development Washington and London want developers and users of machine learning tools to devote more resources toward security. By Elias Groll November 27, 2023 Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas speaks during the daily press briefing at the White House on March 1, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images) Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Copy Link Advertisement Advertisement More Like This MITRE’s Federal AI Sandbox will focus on critical infrastructure, weather modeling, social services By Caroline Nihill White House’s final ‘Trust Regulation’ aims to bolster confidence in federal statistics By Madison Alder Login.gov announces availability for facial recognition technology By Caroline Nihill Advertisement Top Stories SSA database to flag synthetic identity fraud has cost issues, GAO finds By Matt Bracken Data, talent, funding among top barriers for federal agency AI implementation By Madison Alder Government websites aren’t created equal. GSA’s 10x program aims to change that By Matt Bracken Announcing the 2024 FedScoop 50 By FedScoop Staff House Republicans probe NIST on facial recognition for federal digital identity verification By Madison Alder CISA official: AI tools ‘need to have a human in the loop’ By Matt Bracken Advertisement
MITRE’s Federal AI Sandbox will focus on critical infrastructure, weather modeling, social services By Caroline Nihill
White House’s final ‘Trust Regulation’ aims to bolster confidence in federal statistics By Madison Alder
House Republicans probe NIST on facial recognition for federal digital identity verification By Madison Alder
(Getty Images) CISA aims for inventory clarity with post-quantum cryptography guidance The cyber agency’s strategy document for PQC migration details how inventory tools should be used by agencies. By Matt Bracken
(Scoop News Group photo) Federal agencies affected by worldwide IT outage By Rebecca Heilweil Caroline Nihill Madison Alder Matt Bracken
With AI development, Schumer says U.S. needs to hold competitive edge on China for national security By Caroline Nihill
Bipartisan House legislation calls for two new federal cybersecurity training programs By Matt Bracken