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TRUMP AND HEGSETH. US President Donald Trump speaks next to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, USA, March 26, 2026.
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
US news website Semafor reports the administration's plans were put on hold following a push from xAI founder Elon Musk and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, as well as former Trump AI adviser David Sacks
US President Donald Trump on Thursday, May 21, said he had postponed signing an executive order on AI because he did not like certain aspects of it and did not want to take any steps that might undermine the US position in its AI competition with China.
Trump had planned to sign the order at a ceremony on Thursday afternoon attended by CEOs of AI companies.
US news website Semafor reported the administration’s plans were put on hold following a push from xAI founder Elon Musk and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, as well as former Trump AI adviser David Sacks.
“I think it gets in the way of, you know, we’re leading China, we’re leading everybody, and I don’t want to do anything that’s going to get in the way of that lead,” Trump told reporters of the postponement in the Oval Office.
xAI, Meta, and Sacks’ venture capital firm Craft Ventures did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment outside regular business hours.
The order would create a voluntary framework for AI developers to engage with the US. government before the public release of advanced AI models, two sources familiar with the order told Reuters on Wednesday.
Trump did not specify which parts of the executive order he objected to. Tech industry advocates fear that the order’s provisions could hurt the industry’s profits if they slow the rollout of new models or prompt companies to change how those models perform in order to address security concerns.
The president also had planned to direct the US government to use the advanced models to improve the cybersecurity defenses of government systems, along with networks owned by sectors that are vital to the nation’s economy such as banks and hospitals, according to another source.
Concerns are growing across the US government and in the private sector about the cybersecurity risks posed by powerful new AI systems, including Anthropic’s Mythos.
Anthropic has warned that Mythos could supercharge complex cyberattacks, although cybersecurity experts told Reuters that fears of unfettered hacking are overstated.
Trump, since regaining power, has taken a softer stance towards Big Tech firms than the administration of his predecessor, President Joe Biden, with the emergence of AI and its outsized role in U.S. equity markets. Some prominent Trump supporters, however, are calling for guardrails around the technology. – Rappler.com
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