1.FTC AI accuracy comments are due July 31
What changed The FTC is taking public comment on its proposed policy statement about AI accuracy claims through July 31, 2026.
Why it matters If a product page, sales deck, release note, or rollout plan says an AI feature is accurate, reliable, objective, unbiased, or fit for a task, that claim needs support.
Action Put a short evidence record behind every high-value AI claim: test result, known limits, approval owner, and monitoring owner.
Source: FTC · Source: Federal Register2.EU cybersecurity plan ties AI to security assurance
What changed The European Commission published an Action Plan on Cybersecurity and Artificial Intelligence on July 7, connecting advanced AI with testing, evaluation, secure deployment, and critical-sector resilience.
Why it matters AI used for vulnerability detection, incident response, fraud controls, or customer-facing decisions will increasingly be reviewed as both an AI system and a security control.
Action For AI-enabled security or resilience tools, document the model/vendor, allowed use, human checkpoint, logging path, and incident-response owner.
Source: European Commission3.NIST is putting AI data-center security on the agenda
What changed NIST is hosting a July 22–23 virtual workshop on securing AI data centers, including architecture, security posture, and emerging standards.
Why it matters AI governance is not only model behavior. Critical AI services also depend on compute, storage, access control, supply chain, physical security, and vendor continuity.
Action Add infrastructure dependency, continuity owner, and escalation path to the inventory for your most important AI-enabled systems.
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