
""What is AI? How are we going to provide training to both the developers and the trainers - train the trainers, if you will - and employees? What areas can we leverage AI? What risks [are there] with AI?""
"He added that, while Microsoft Azure OpenAI "is the engine of our AI initiative," it took GPO roughly two years to train its developers on how to use the capabilities."
"Musa said one of the agency's early lessons was that "AI is not cheap, and AI takes time to master," adding that "you will do a lot of training [and] you do a lot of security assessments.""
The Government Publishing Office has piloted and deployed artificial intelligence capabilities to simplify agency tasks, including an internal AI-generated podcast to help personnel digest information more engagingly. The agency’s AI efforts began in earnest in 2019 after attendance at a Massachusetts Institute of Technology class on emerging capabilities. An AI-specific policy was created to define AI, outline training for developers and employees, identify leverage areas, and assess risks. Onboarding required coordination with legal and IT units to establish safeguards. The agency follows the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, uses Microsoft Azure OpenAI, and invested roughly two years training developers. Security, training, and cost emerged as primary considerations.
Read at Nextgov.com
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