Trump scrapped a major AI safety plan — here’s why that matters for ChatGPT users

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The AI race just took another dramatic turn this week.

President Donald Trump reportedly backed away from signing a major executive order that would have created new voluntary guardrails for advanced AI systems — a move that signals the U.S. may now prioritize AI acceleration over regulation.

According to reports from Reuters and The New York Times, the order would have encouraged companies like OpenAI, Google DeepMind and Meta AI to share powerful AI models with the federal government before public release so agencies could evaluate potential national security and cybersecurity risks.

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But Trump reportedly pulled the plug after concerns that the order could slow down American AI innovation while China rapidly advances its own AI ecosystem. For that reason, this may be one of the strongest signals yet about where AI in America is heading next.

The AI safety debate just shifted again

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For the past two years, much of the AI conversation in Washington has revolved around safety. Conversations about whether AI companies should be forced to test powerful models like Anthropic's Mythos before launch. And, how the advancement of AI could threaten jobs, cybersecurity and even elections. Also, how to prevent deepfakes and misinformation.

The proposed executive order appears to have been designed as a middle ground. Reports suggest it would have created voluntary cooperation between AI companies and the government rather than hard regulation.

Trump reportedly worried the order could act as a “blocker” for U.S. AI companies competing against China — reflecting a growing belief among some tech leaders that America’s biggest AI threat isn’t unsafe AI, but losing the AI race altogether.

What this means for AI tools like ChatGPT and Gemini

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For consumers, this likely means AI companies may continue moving extremely fast. Users could see more experimental AI features rolling out quicker, faster updates, more autonomous “agentic” AI systems and less federal oversight over how these systems launch.

Silicon Valley may quietly welcome this because AI leaders increasingly believe regulation itself could become a competitive disadvantage. If U.S. companies face stricter oversight while rivals overseas move faster, some fear America could lose its lead in foundational AI models.

That’s especially important as AI increasingly becomes tied to national security, military systems, economic growth, scientific research and infrastructure.

The concern from critics is that innovation may now outpace safeguards. According to the Center of AI Safety, the acceleration of artificial intelligence is much faster than the safety research, which could lead to catastrophes.

The result is a growing divide between “AI safety” advocates and “AI accelerationists” who believe speed matters more than caution. And this latest decision by the Administration suggests the accelerationists may currently have the upper hand.

The bigger issue nobody can fully answer yet

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The truth is nobody really knows what the correct pace of AI regulation should be. Move too slowly, and governments risk losing control over increasingly powerful systems. Yet, move too aggressively, and you may slow down innovation in one of the most transformative technologies in decades.

That tension is what now sits at the center of nearly every major AI debate happening in Washington and Silicon Valley. And after this latest move, it increasingly looks like the U.S. government is leaning toward one core idea of win first and regulate later.

Bottom line

Trump backing away from this AI executive order may end up being far more significant than it initially sounds. This move signals that the future of AI policy in America may increasingly revolve around competition and speed rather than precaution and safety.

For everyday users, that likely means AI tools will continue evolving rapidly — with more powerful features arriving faster than ever. Whether the safeguards keep up is the question nobody can answer yet.


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Amanda Caswell
AI Editor

Amanda Caswell is the AI Editor at Tom's Guide and one of today’s leading voices in AI and technology.

A celebrated contributor to various news outlets, her sharp insights and relatable storytelling have earned her a loyal readership. Amanda’s work has been recognized with prestigious honors, including outstanding contribution to media.

Known for her ability to bring clarity to even the most complex topics, Amanda seamlessly blends innovation and creativity, inspiring readers to embrace the power of AI and emerging technologies.

As a certified prompt engineer, she continues to push the boundaries of how humans and AI can work together.

Beyond her journalism career, Amanda is a long-distance runner and mom of three. She lives in New Jersey.

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