US to launch AI and cybersecurity coordination group, White House says

US to launch AI and cybersecurity coordination group, White House says
US President Donald Trump and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at a working lunch during the G7 Summit in France. (Reuters)
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Updated 15 July 2026 00:56
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US to launch AI and cybersecurity coordination group, White House says

US to launch AI and cybersecurity coordination group, White House says
  • Arrangement ‌includes developers of open-source AI models, said White ‌House cyber director Sean Cairncross

WASHINGTON: The US ​will formally bring together AI developers and essential services providers to share information on cybersecurity vulnerabilities identified by advanced AI systems and coordinate responses, according to a White House statement, fulfilling US President Donald Trump’s order from June.

Companies including Anthropic and OpenAI have released powerful AI systems capable ‌of identifying ‌software and infrastructure vulnerabilities at ​scale. ‌US ⁠officials worry that ​bad ⁠actors could use them to exploit weaknesses in the software systems underpinning critical services — including those of financial institutions, hospitals and energy networks — relied upon by Americans. 

The Trump administration set up a coordination group between leading AI developers and the essential ⁠services providers so they can share information ‌about vulnerabilities they ‌have discovered in their software and ​not duplicate efforts. 

The arrangement ‌includes developers of open-source AI models, said White ‌House cyber director Sean Cairncross. 

Cairncross did not specify which developers are involved. 

In the US, Nvidia, Meta Platforms and the startup Reflection offer open-source options.

Trump ‌in a June executive order directed the Treasury Department, National Cyber Director’s Office, ⁠Department of Defense ⁠and National Security Agency to set up the collaboration.

This is the latest example of the Trump administration playing a more active role in the AI sector. 

Trump at the beginning of his second term said he would take a hands-off approach to the technology. That has shifted in recent months, with his administration taking a more active role in monitoring AI’s capabilities ​and considering the national ​security risks they present.