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President Trump and Elon Musk's DOGE initiative is misapplying artificial intelligence and missing its full potential.
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost's office has sided with Cleveland police in a murder case where officers used artificial intelligence software to identify a suspect and justify a search warrant.
The DOJ and a coalition of 38 state attorneys general still seek a court order requiring Google to sell its Chrome browser and take other measures aimed at addressing what a judge said was Google's illegal search monopoly, according to court papers filed in Washington.
DOGE access to government computers has sparked fears about cybersecurity vulnerabilities and privacy violations, as well as. the potential use of the data to train a private company's artificial intelligence system.
Using AI to identify "mission-critical" jobs? Spotting dead people on the Social Security rolls? There's an urgent role for automation and AI in government -- but the what DOGE appears to be doing doesn't add up.
The new administration would be wise to keep CAIOs in federal agencies as it embarks on its AI strategy. In the midst of a new presidential administration, discussions about the future of U.S. artificial intelligence policy remain at the forefront of everyone's mind across industry, government and civil society.
Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency appear to have wide-reaching plans to remake the government with AI. Thomas Shedd, a former Tesla engineer who is now the head of the Technology Transformation Services, a federal IT division, invoked an "AI-first strategy" at a recent staff meeting.
There is no shortage of information for Trump officials to immediately plug into AI tools to support deportation efforts.