DHS Wants to Be an AI Early Adopter
โWe have to celebrate it, and we have to be sober about it at the same time,โ Robert Silvers said.

As the Biden administration prepares to release a highly anticipated executive order on artificial intelligence in the coming weeks, the Department of Homeland Security is developing its own set of priorities for responsible deployment of the nascent technology.
The agency is striving to be an โaggressiveโ adopter of AI while ensuring that there is good governance, risk management and policy in place to adopt trustworthy AI systems.
โWe should be early and aggressive adopters of the technology. We should also be at the vanguard of establishing rules for responsible and ethical and safe use for our own programs. And so weโre doing both,โ said DHS Undersecretary for Policy Robert Silvers at this weekโs Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technologyโs AI DC 2023: Securing Americaโs Future conference in Arlington, Virginia.
โWe look at issues like fentanyl, which is killing so many Americans every year. It is so small and hard to detect. โฆ AI is holding tremendous promise for how we can better target and interdict fentanyl. The same for security screening at airports, how you can streamline and make that more accurate,โ he added. โNow, there are real risks when it comes to artificial intelligence. We have to be sober about that. But we also have to celebrate where weโre going.โ
Silvers said that DHS is working to provide critical infrastructure firms with guidance on responsible deployment of AI. The agency will provide guidelines on testing and auditing front- and back-end systems, when to introduce a human in the loop and how to deal with major system failures.
The agency will work closely with industry partners to deliver guidance that will allow critical infrastructure companies to improve resiliency to adversarial attacks and provide more visibility into the risks of AI.
โWeโre leading into it together with industry partners. I mean, we really have to be humble in the government about our level of understanding of this technology. Itโs super complex. Itโs super nuanced. And talent is at a premium. And weโre fighting for talent. The companies are fighting for talent. And itโs something thatโs nascent. It will only succeed if we are literally shoulder to shoulder with the companies โฆ that are developing the technology,โ said Silvers.
Silvers also said that the agencyโs Cyber Safety Review Board, a public-private partnership meant to provide the federal agencies and private sector with concrete recommendations after major cyber incidents, is currently reviewing the recent Chinese cyber operation that hacked government agenciesโ Microsoft accounts.
The review board โis a truly public-private undertaking,โ Silvers said.
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