As the Trump administration works to incorporate commercial AI technologies into government operations, a senior administration official stated that U.S. government agencies will have access to Meta Platforms’ new tab artificial intelligence system Llama.
Josh Gruenbaum, the procurement lead for the General Services Administration, the government’s purchasing arm, stated in an interview prior to the announcement that Llama will be added to its list of authorised AI tools for federal agencies.
GSA will then guarantee that Llama, a free big language model that can analyse text, photos, video, and audio, satisfies the government’s security and legal requirements, allowing agencies to test the free tool.
Text, video, graphics, and audio can all be processed using the huge language model Llama.
Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, Google, Anthropic, and Open AI are some of Meta’s rivals whose AI tools GSA has approved in recent months. According to GSA, those companies have agreed to comply with the government’s security regulations and provide their premium goods at hefty discounts.
Gruenbaum responded, “It’s not about currying favour,” when asked if tech executives are offering government discounts in an effort to win over President Donald Trump. “The understanding of how we can all unite and make this nation the best it can be is what it’s about.”
Among other things, he added, federal agencies will be able to use the tool for faster contract approval or more rapidly resolve IT issues.
“America is at the forefront of AI, and we want to ensure that everyone in the country benefits from this advancement by providing better, more effective public services.” “America’s government agencies can better serve people with Llama,” stated Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta.
In the past, Meta has worked on national security applications with contractors and U.S. government agencies. According to a press release from Meta, this agreement would support government priorities such as OMB Memoranda M-25-21 (Accelerating Federal Use of AI through Innovation, Governance, and Public Trust) and M-25-22 (Driving Efficient Acquisition of Artificial Intelligence in Government) and help strengthen the goals outlined in the U.S. “AI Action Plan.”
The partnership will “strengthen the federal government’s ability to test, adapt, and deploy AI while maintaining full control over sensitive data,” according to Meta.
The company further stated in a press release that it was happy to see Llama allow public sector agencies the freedom to develop mission-specific solutions, lessen reliance on closed vendors, and promote openness and reproducibility in AI research.
In recent months, the GSA has also approved products from rivals of Meta, such as Microsoft, Google, Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, and Open AI. According to GSA, the businesses agreed to comply with the government’s security regulations and provide their premium goods at hefty discounts.
Anthropic used to say it could sell its goods to the government for as cheap as $1. As part of its “AI Action Plan,” the Trump administration has partnered with top AI firms in an effort to put the United States at the forefront of the “AI race.”
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