The White House did not immediately respond to a commentary request.
A company that should have been part of the GSA ads was Xai of Musk, according to sources with knowledge of the discussions.
At the beginning of June, GSA leadership met the XAI team for a two-hour brainstorming session “to see which opportunities could exist for automation and rationalization”, according to an e-mail obtained from Wired.
The session seemed to be fine. After its end, GSA leadership continued to push for the agency to launch Grok for internal use. “We kept saying” are you sure? “And they were like” No, we must have Grok “, an employee involved in the discussions says to Wired.
The conversations have gone far enough that XAI was added to the GSA multiple prizes program, which is the long -term contract program of the long -term agency, by the end of June, according to the documents obtained by Wired. The move would allow federal agencies to buy Grok via Carhsoft, who is a technological dealer and a government contractor.
Then, at the beginning of July, Grok seemed to go out of the tracks, vomiting anti -Semitic hatred, praising Adolf Hitler and parrot theories of racist conspiracy on X. Some members of the GSA staff were surprised that the accident did not seem to slow down the supply process. “The week after Grok became Mechahitler, [GSA leadership] Was it like “Where are we on Grok?” “The same employee says.” We were, “Didn’t you read a newspaper?” “
So GSA’s leadership seemed to change the route abruptly. Just before GSA was destined to announce his partnerships with Openai, Antropic, Google’s Gemini and Xai last week, the staff were asked to remove Xai Grok from the contractual offer, two sources with Knowledge Tell Wired. Two GSA workers involved in the contract believe that Xai was pulled due to Grok’s anti -Semitic tirata last month.
Xai did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Wired.
The ads for the GSA partnerships with Openi and Anthropic, in the meantime, took place so quickly that “it was not even clear who to send $ 1 or as”, says a GSA source to Wired.
And while Openai and Anthropic have issued tools exclusively for the use of the government, neither of the two companies have eliminated the necessary regulatory obstacles so that the agencies can buy directly from them. In particular, they have not been approved through Fedramp, a program led by GSA that guarantees the safety of private cloud services through intense safety projections. There are, however, carving within the implementation memo to allow products that have not been approved by Fedramp to be brought to the government in a research and development capacity.
“The administration was not irresponsible to issue an executive order that required such a quick turning point to bring out those implementation memos,” because this meant that the government was unable to consult the significant number of interested parties that they would otherwise have had, says a former official of the White House that spoke with Wired on condition of anonymity.
The Trump administration has wasted no time to bring artificial intelligence to the government. One of the first executive orders signed by Trump has prompted agencies to reverse any rules that inhibits the growth and domain of American artificial intelligence, kicking off a crazy hand between the leaders of the administration to find new ways to incorporate technology in everything. On the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Mehmet OZ suggested to replace some early -line health workers with AI Avatar. The representatives of the so -called Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) used the IA to find regulations to cut and write code. In June, the head of the United States light Tulsi Gabbard spoke In a top of Amazon Web Services for using artificial intelligence tools to review the classified documents relating to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. (When released, the files occurred to contain the Social security numbers and additional private information of hundreds of living people.
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