Following agreements with Google, SpaceX, and OpenAI, the U.S. Department of Defense on Friday announced agreements with Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, and Reflection AI to allow them to deploy their AI technology and models on classified networks for “lawful operational purposes.”
“These agreements will accelerate the transformation toward establishing the U.S. military as an AI-first combat force and strengthen the warfighter’s ability to maintain judgment superiority across all domains of warfare,” the statement said.
The deal comes as the U.S. Department of Defense accelerates its diversification of AI vendors following a controversial dispute with Anthropic over the terms of use of its AI models. The Pentagon wanted unrestricted use of Anthropic’s AI tools, but the AI Institute insisted on guardrails to prevent Anthropic’s technology from being used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons.
The companies are currently fighting in court, but in March Anthropic won an injunction against the Pentagon’s move to label the company a “supply chain risk.”
“The Department continues to build an architecture that prevents AI vendor lock-in and ensures long-term flexibility for the joint force,” the statement said. “Access to a diverse suite of AI capabilities from across the entire Resilient American technology stack gives warfighters the tools they need to act with confidence and protect our nation from any threat.”
The Pentagon said its AI hardware and models will be deployed in Impact Level 6 (IL6) and Impact Level 7 (IL7) environments to “streamline data synthesis, increase situational understanding, and enhance warfighter decision-making.” IL6 and IL7 are high-level security classifications for data and information systems that are considered critical to national security and require that these systems be physically protected through strict access controls and audits.
To date, more than 1.3 million DoD employees have used GenAI.mil, a secure enterprise platform for generative AI that provides access to large-scale language models (LLMs) and other AI tools in a government-approved cloud environment, according to the Department of Defense. It is primarily designed to assist with non-confidential tasks such as research, documentation, and data analysis.
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