# 白宫向 Anthropic、Google 和 OpenAI 通报政府AI审查流程计划

- 来源：The Decoder：AI News（RSS）
- 作者：Maximilian Schreiner
- 发布时间：2026-05-05 17:53
- AIHOT 分数：63
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmosgf0bf007zslh1fsui376c
- 原文链接：https://the-decoder.com/white-house-briefed-anthropic-google-and-openai-on-plans-for-a-government-ai-review-process

## AI 摘要

白宫在经历一年的放松监管后，正讨论一项可能要求新AI模型在发布前接受政府审查的行政命令。此举的直接导火索是Anthropic的“Mythos”模型。政府已向Anthropic、Google和OpenAI三家领先的AI公司通报了相关计划，标志着美国AI监管政策可能从宽松转向事前审查。该审查流程旨在在模型公开发布前进行安全评估。

## 正文

White House briefed Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI on plans for a government AI review process

Key Points

The Trump administration is weighing an executive order to require government review of new AI models before release, reversing its earlier deregulation stance.

The shift was triggered by Anthropic's "Mythos" model, which the company withheld from public release over cybersecurity concerns and which the NSA is already using.

Growing bipartisan public concern about AI and the departure of AI czar David Sacks have further driven the policy change.

After a year of deregulation, the White House is now discussing an executive order that could subject new AI models to government review before their release. The trigger appears to be Anthropic's "Mythos" model.

The Trump administration is weighing a fundamental shift in its AI policy. According to a New York Times report, the White House is discussing an executive order that would establish a working group of tech executives and government officials. The group would examine potential oversight procedures, including a formal government review process for new AI models before their public release.

In meetings last week, the White House briefed representatives from Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI on the plans, the Times writes, citing people familiar with the discussions. The British model is reportedly serving as a template, where several agencies assess whether AI systems meet specific safety standards. A White House spokesperson told The Information that the reports were "speculation" and said any policy announcement would come directly from Trump.

Anthropic's "Mythos" as the trigger

The reversal began in April, according to the Times, after Anthropic introduced its Claude Mythos model. According to Anthropic, the system is so powerful at identifying software vulnerabilities that the company declined to release it publicly, warning it could trigger a cybersecurity "reckoning." The NSA is already using Mythos to assess vulnerabilities in US government software.

Within the White House, concern is reportedly growing over the political fallout should an AI-enabled cyberattack cause significant damage. Some officials are pushing for a review system that would give the government first access to new models without blocking their release.

The discussion marks a sharp change in course. After returning to office, Trump rolled back regulatory measures from the Biden administration, including mandatory safety evaluations for models with potential military applications. In July, he called AI a "beautiful baby" that should not be stopped "with foolish rules" or "even stupid rules." At an international AI summit in Paris, Vice President JD Vance warned that "excessive regulation" could "kill a transformative industry."

Meanwhile, political pressure has shifted. A Pew survey found that 50 percent of Republicans and 51 percent of Democrats are more concerned than excited about the growing use of AI in daily life. There has also been a personnel shift within the White House: David Sacks, who as AI czar had spearheaded the deregulation agenda, left his post in March. Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have since taken over the AI agenda and, according to the Times, have told people outside the administration that they plan to play a bigger role in shaping policy.

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