President Donald Trump called off a signing ceremony Thursday for a latest order on artificial intelligence due to the fact he worried it could dull America’s edge on AI technology.
Trump stated he was rescheduling the signing because he did not like what he noticed in the order’s text. He declared the change hours before the event was scheduled to take place within the Oval Office.
“We’re leading China, we’re leading everyone, and I do not want to do something that is going to get in the way of that lead,” Trump informed reporters at an unrelated Oval Office event.
The push for some sort of government action to vet the most powerful AI systems follows developing difficulty within the banking industry and other institutions about the leaps in AI’s abilities to discover cybersecurity vulnerabilities in the world’s software.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell assembled an urgent assembly with Wall Street CEOs in April, warning them about the cybersecurity risks posed by Anthropic’s AI model, Claude Mythos.
The meeting, urgently arranged on the Treasury Department’s headquarters, was supposed to ensure that banks were aware of the risks related with the models, Bessent stated at CNBC’s “Invest in America Forum” in Washington in April. “This latest Anthropic model is very effective,” he stated. “Some banks are doing a better job in cybersecurity than others, and we want to have the ability to arrange them and communicate about what is best practices and wherein they must be heading.”
That led some allies of the Republican president to propose better techniques for getting those AI tools in the hands of trusted cybersecurity specialists.
But an technique that could be perceived as government screening of commercial AI models might have signaled a significant-shift in Trump’s pledges coming into his second White House term to undo the AI safety regulations set by Democratic President Joe Biden.











