Something changed on the Commerce Department’s website. What, exactly, and why, hasn’t been explained.
According to reporting by Reuters, as cited by CXO Digital Pulse, details of pre-release AI security testing agreements between the US Department of Commerce and Microsoft, Google, and xAI were reportedly no longer accessible via the agency’s website as of mid-May 2026. The Commerce Department had announced these agreements in early May 2026 as part of the Consortium for AI Safety and Innovation (CAISI) framework. No official statement explaining the removal has been issued, as of the publication date of this brief.
The timing is notable. The hub’s own registry shows CAISI agreements were being actively reported as operational as recently as May 13, 2026 — the same day a registry entry titled “CASI Now Has Testing Agreements With All Five Frontier AI Labs” was published. If the reported removal occurred before that entry, the timeline needs clarification. If it occurred after, the window between full public announcement and website removal was extremely short. That gap, if confirmed, is the detail that matters most for anyone tracking the architecture of federal AI oversight.
Timeline
The CAISI framework was designed to give the Commerce Department pre-release access to frontier AI models for safety evaluation. The five labs that reportedly entered agreements — including Microsoft, Google, xAI, and others — committed to sharing model information before public release. Whether that operational relationship continues regardless of website status is unknown. Website removal and program termination aren’t the same thing. The distinction matters, and only an official statement can make it.
Three possible explanations exist, none confirmed: administrative website reorganization unrelated to policy, a deliberate policy shift away from publicizing the agreements, or a transition in how the program is structured or named. Presenting any of these as more likely than another isn’t warranted by the available evidence.
Unanswered Questions
- Did the Commerce Department remove the testing agreement page, reorganize it, or was the removal a technical error?
- Are the pre-release testing relationships with the five frontier labs still operationally active regardless of website status?
- Will the White House or Commerce Department issue a statement explaining the change?
The catch is that “no official response” is itself informative. Federal agencies that make public announcements about AI safety testing partnerships don’t typically remove that content without explanation unless something has changed — in policy, in structure, or in the relationship with the labs. What changed, and when, is the question this brief can’t yet answer.
Don’t expect the story to stay quiet. Policy professionals and researchers tracking federal AI oversight will notice the absence. If the Commerce Department or White House issues a statement, the hub will update this item immediately.