Trump signed an executive order on June 2, 2026, establishing a voluntary framework for federal review of covered frontier AI models up to 30 days before public release, focusing on cybersecurity benchmarking and capability thresholds rather than mandatory licensing. This followed internal debates that shortened an earlier draft from 90 days and reflects concerns over advanced cyber risks from large language models, even as the administration maintains a light-touch approach to avoid stifling U.S. innovation against competitors like China. Major developers including OpenAI quickly signaled compliance, reinforcing trader views that the order aligns with existing industry practices for security assessments. Key upcoming factors include how agencies define “covered frontier models” within 60 days and whether additional companies adopt the voluntary process ahead of major model launches.
基於Polymarket數據的AI實驗性摘要。這不是交易建議,也不影響該市場的結算方式。 · 更新於$296,509 交易量
June 30
27%
$296,509 交易量
June 30
27%
A qualifying action must create a federal process for reviewing or approving the public release of new artificial intelligence models. A qualifying review process may apply to artificial intelligence models generally, only to models meeting specified criteria (e.g.capability, safety, cybersecurity, national-security, or other risk-based criteria), or to models selected for review at the discretion of the federal government.
Legislation or executive actions which create a group or committee responsible for overseeing artificial intelligence matters will only qualify if they explicitly create a qualifying review process.
Non-binding statements, proposals, unconfirmed reports, or federal review of artificial intelligence models solely for government procurement or internal government use will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
市場開放時間: May 26, 2026, 2:23 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A qualifying action must create a federal process for reviewing or approving the public release of new artificial intelligence models. A qualifying review process may apply to artificial intelligence models generally, only to models meeting specified criteria (e.g.capability, safety, cybersecurity, national-security, or other risk-based criteria), or to models selected for review at the discretion of the federal government.
Legislation or executive actions which create a group or committee responsible for overseeing artificial intelligence matters will only qualify if they explicitly create a qualifying review process.
Non-binding statements, proposals, unconfirmed reports, or federal review of artificial intelligence models solely for government procurement or internal government use will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trump signed an executive order on June 2, 2026, establishing a voluntary framework for federal review of covered frontier AI models up to 30 days before public release, focusing on cybersecurity benchmarking and capability thresholds rather than mandatory licensing. This followed internal debates that shortened an earlier draft from 90 days and reflects concerns over advanced cyber risks from large language models, even as the administration maintains a light-touch approach to avoid stifling U.S. innovation against competitors like China. Major developers including OpenAI quickly signaled compliance, reinforcing trader views that the order aligns with existing industry practices for security assessments. Key upcoming factors include how agencies define “covered frontier models” within 60 days and whether additional companies adopt the voluntary process ahead of major model launches.
基於Polymarket數據的AI實驗性摘要。這不是交易建議,也不影響該市場的結算方式。 · 更新於
警惕外部連結哦。
警惕外部連結哦。
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