OpenAI on US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI
Child of US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI
Metadata
| Source Table | policy_stakeholders |
| Source ID | Ei_ZEHB9FL |
| Source URL | www.nist.gov/aisi |
| Parent | US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI |
| Children | — |
| Created | Apr 15, 2026, 2:18 AM |
| Updated | Apr 15, 2026, 2:18 AM |
| Synced | Apr 15, 2026, 2:18 AM |
Record Data
id | Ei_ZEHB9FL |
policyEntityId | US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI(policy) |
stakeholderEntityId | OpenAI(organization) |
stakeholderDisplayName | OpenAI |
position | support |
importance | high |
reason | Signed voluntary pre-deployment testing agreement with AISI (Aug 2024); participated in White House commitments from July 2023; scored 83.3% compliance across 30 indicators |
source | www.nist.gov/aisi |
context | [ "One of the original seven companies to sign White House voluntary commitments in July 2023", "GPT-4 and subsequent models above the 10^26 FLOP threshold triggering mandatory reporting", "Later quietly removed some Biden-era AI policy commitments from its website (March 2025)" ] |
Source Check Verdicts
Last checked: 4/9/2026
The record claims that OpenAI is a stakeholder in an unspecified policy context, with the status marked as 'unknown'. The source text provided is entirely about NIST's CAISI center—its mission, functions, research, and contacts. While CAISI does work with 'private sector AI developers and evaluators' and 'establish voluntary agreements with private sector AI developers,' the source does not specifically name OpenAI or any other individual companies as stakeholders. Without explicit mention of OpenAI in the source material, the claim cannot be confirmed or contradicted—it is simply unverifiable based on this source.
Debug info
Thing ID: Ei_ZEHB9FL
Source Table: policy_stakeholders
Source ID: Ei_ZEHB9FL
Parent Thing ID: sid_pz3KSt33AA