U.S. Regierung wählt OpenAI, Google und Anthropic aus, um Bundesbehörden mit KI-Tools zu versorgen

Die US-Regierung setzt auf Big-Tech-KI: OpenAI, Google und Anthropic erhalten den Zuschlag für die Ausstattung von Bundesbehörden mit KI-Tools. Ein milliardenschwerer Deal – weil nichts so effizient ist wie Steuergelder, die in private Tech-Giganten fließen.
KI für die Bürokratie: Wird das System jetzt schlauer – oder nur teurer?
Die drei Tech-Konzerne sollen Behörden mit Sprachmodellen, Automatisierungslösungen und Predictive Analytics ausstatten. Ob das den Steuerzahler entlastet oder doch nur die Quartalszahlen der Konzerne pusht? Die Antwort liegt wohl irgendwo zwischen 'disruptiver Effizienzsteigerung' und 'subventionierter Monopolbildung'.
Federal agencies prepare for widespread AI integration
The U.S. government’s decision to approve OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic as official AI vendors marks a turning point in how federal agencies adopt and integrate artificial intelligence into their operations.
For example, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) plans to use AI to develop customer service chatbots and analyze public comments on federal regulations. OPM Director Scott Kupor noted that manually summarizing tens of thousands of citizen responses often delays the regulatory process, but said that with AI, the agency could work faster and more accurately.
Other departments like the Treasury and the Department of Commerce are exploring AI to help detect tax fraud, process patents, and support grant application reviews. Until now, many of these tools were limited to small-scale pilot projects, often siloed within national security or research-focused initiatives. The GSA’s new approval opens the door for agency-wide and cross-agency adoption.
The Pentagon has already been ahead of the curve, issuing contracts to OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI for military-related projects. Those deals are separate from the GSA program but signal a federal consensus: AI is now a Core component of U.S. government strategy.
White House sets new standards to curb AI bias
The GSA’s announcement follows a recent push from U.S. President Donald TRUMP to reshape federal AI policy. Just days before the vendor list was released, Trump signed three executive orders to tighten government AI use oversight.
This rule suggests that it will be implemented at the agency level, with each department deciding what bias is and how they imagine they can test for it. Trump and other conservative leaders have regularly referred to bias as the “woke AI” problem.
The effort goes beyond simply processing new technology, said Josh Gruenbaum, Commissioner of the GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service. He called it winning the global race in artificial intelligence, the same thing the president said when he declared that “the U.S. must win.”
Still, the inclusion of OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, companies often accused by conservatives of holding liberal biases, suggests the government focuses more on utility and performance than ideology, at least in the early stages.
The GSA noted that the agency’s vetting process included bias assessments, security checks, and performance evaluations, and added that more tools WOULD be added as they meet the required standards.
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