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The Biden administration is calling on the federal government to step up its use of artificial intelligence. For most agencies, that work will start in 2024.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency is using AI is helping people do their jobs better and faster, and with even day-to-day things like supporting individuals who code and using large language models to help them create code.
Experts say the national cyber strategy was the biggest development of 2023, but several other events also made for an interesting year in cyber.
Congress wants spy agencies to hire more experts in financial intelligence, emerging technology.
Chief data officers across the federal government see their work as the key to accelerating the adoption of artificial intelligence tools across the federal government.
Raman said generative AI and large language models really "caught the intelligence community by storm" in late 2022, when its potential to augment human analysts became clear. And that's precisely what the CIA wants to do: Augment its human analysts, not replace them, in order to enable the agency's mission.
Airmen and guardians can now experiment with commercial generative AI and a new policy lays out how they can do it safely.
Lawmakers hope the IC's own innovation unit will help intel agencies better adopt emerging technologies.
The White House executive order on AI is heavily positioned around data protection, privacy and disclosure. All these concepts are important priorities when considering how AI is used in modeling and accelerating the business process…
Federal and industry experts say ensuring your organization’s data is current, reliable, kept private and secure will help accelerate the use of artificial intelligence tools to improve decision making.
The Defense Intelligence Agency is finalizing its artificial intelligence strategy to control the use of technology for decision support and human-machine teaming when providing intelligence to warfighters and policymakers.
The director of NGA said a major RFP for commercial data services is coming, while the agency is also pressing forward on artificial intelligence initiatives.
Federal agencies see lots of possibilities for using artificial intelligence tools in their day-to-day work. But they've only put a fraction of those ideas into practice.
As the artificial intelligence phenomenon rolls on, the question emerges: What are the cybersecurity-attack implications of AI? Now Carnegie Mellon University's Software Engineering Institute has formed a team called the Artificial Intelligence Security Incident Response Team. It's working with sponsors in the Defense and Homeland Security Departments. For more, the Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke with the Director of the CERT division of the Software Engineering Institute, Greg Touhill.
Weekly interviews with federal agency chief information officers about the latest directives, challenges and successes. Follow Jason on Twitter. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Podcast One.