policy-stakeholder
Apple 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 | OMf5uFrI8I |
| Source URL | www.fastcompany.com/91389117/biden-era-ai-safety-promises-arent-holding-up-and-apples-the-weakest-link |
| Parent | US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI |
| Children | — |
| Created | Apr 15, 2026, 7:19 AM |
| Updated | Apr 15, 2026, 7:19 AM |
| Synced | Apr 15, 2026, 7:19 AM |
Record Data
id | OMf5uFrI8I |
policyEntityId | US Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI(policy) |
stakeholderEntityId | Apple(organization) |
stakeholderDisplayName | Apple |
position | mixed |
importance | medium |
reason | Joined voluntary commitments late (July 2024); minimal engagement with AISI; scored lowest among signatories at 13.3% compliance across 30 indicators |
source | www.fastcompany.com/91389117/biden-era-ai-safety-promises-arent-holding-up-and-a… |
context | [ "Signed commitments a full year after the original seven companies", "Brown/Harvard/Stanford study found Apple met only 4 of 30 compliance indicators", "Apple Intelligence launch proceeded with minimal public safety testing or disclosure" ] |
Source Check Verdicts
confirmed95% confidence
Last checked: 4/14/2026
The source text directly confirms that Apple is a stakeholder/signatory in the Biden-era AI safety policy commitments. The record identifies Apple as a stakeholder with 'unknown' key fields, which is appropriate given that the source provides specific performance metrics (13% compliance score) but the record itself does not claim any specific values for those fields. The source clearly establishes Apple's role as a policy stakeholder in this context.
Debug info
Thing ID: OMf5uFrI8I
Source Table: policy_stakeholders
Source ID: OMf5uFrI8I
Parent Thing ID: sid_pz3KSt33AA