The Trump administration is moving to strengthen coordination on artificial intelligence cybersecurity through a new industry clearinghouse to improve the detection and patching of network vulnerabilities, especially in open-source software.
The clearinghouse, named Gold Eagle, was rolled out earlier this month by the Treasury Department, Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon, in consultation with AI companies, according to National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross, who briefed reporters on the initiative July 14.
It will allow for the exchange of information about potential vulnerabilities and is a product of the AI executive order President Donald Trump issued last month. The administration is working with the Software Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon University to develop a platform that will service as the intake portion of the clearinghouse, allowing companies to voluntarily provide their most advanced models for evaluation.
Separately, the Vulnerability Information and Coordination Environment will handle the dissemination aspect of the clearinghouse, allowing for the secure sharing of information on vulnerabilities so that software defects can be fixed, Cairncross said. The clearinghouse will include open-source scanning, he added.
The initiative is a centerpiece of Trump’s June executive order that outlined his administration’s approach to addressing the cybersecurity threats raised by AI. The directive followed months of wrangling over how much oversight the federal government should have over new powerful models, and offered a largely laissez-faire approach. Trump stopped short of mandating safety tests on cutting-edge AI models and instead sought to make them available to the government with developers’ permission for a 30-day review period.
The administration, however, has taken steps that appear counter to that hands-off approach in recent weeks. Officials restricted Anthropic PBC from releasing their most advanced models over concerns they could be exploited by bad actors. And under pressure from the administration, rival company OpenAI separately limited the release of its GPT-5.6 model to government-approved partners.
Officials have since lifted foreign access curbs on Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models after the company created additional cybersecurity guardrails for its technology. Meanwhile, OpenAI rolled out its newest suite of GPT-5.6 models after weeks of discussion with government officials.
Still, it remains unclear if the White House’s more recent heavy-handed approach is a permanent feature of its AI policy and what that means for any new releases on the horizon. That uncertainty poses a challenge for an industry that has sought to ease regulatory burdens.
A senior administration official on Tuesday sidestepped questions about whether the Trump administration would consider any further executive action on restricting overseas access to US open-source models after reports that China is considering such a move for its own companies.
The official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity to discuss the new clearinghouse, said the US supported the growth of the US open-source community.
Topics InsurTech Data Driven Artificial Intelligence Cyber New Markets
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