White House to Introduce New AI Regulation Standards Next Week, Reversing Trump's Previous Commitment to 'Light Regulation'

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According to monitoring by Beating, the 'light regulation' approach led by the Trump administration for AI is facing serious challenges. The Financial Times reports that the White House is expected to unveil a set of voluntary standards for cutting-edge AI model releases as early as next week, aimed at establishing benchmarks for models with top-tier cybersecurity capabilities and creating a timeline for regulating future releases. The U.S. AI Standards and Innovation Center and the National Security Agency (NSA) will play key roles in the formulation and oversight of these standards. Last month, direct intervention by the Trump administration in two major AI labs caused chaos and anger in the industry: Anthropic faced export controls on its latest model due to misuse and cybersecurity concerns, which were lifted only this Tuesday; OpenAI was instructed to release GPT-5.6 only to a government-selected audience, with a broader release expected as soon as next week; Google is also in discussions with the government before releasing a new generation of coding models with enhanced cybersecurity capabilities. Despite Trump's previous commitment to loosen regulations to help U.S. companies outpace their Chinese competitors, the potential risks posed by new models exploiting security vulnerabilities and threatening critical industries are forcing the White House to tighten security measures.
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