Recent announcements from the Commerce Department and National Institute of Standards and Technology have established voluntary pre-release testing partnerships with Google, Microsoft, and xAI, yet these fall short of a formal presidential order directing broad federal reviews of all advanced AI models by May 31. The administration’s earlier focus on preempting state-level AI rules and promoting a national policy framework has not extended to mandatory oversight timelines, while recent statements indicate ongoing internal study rather than imminent action. With the deadline just two weeks away and no executive order or directive announced, traders see limited room for a sudden shift, especially given the administration’s historical emphasis on minimizing regulatory burdens for frontier AI development.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$63,554 Vol.
$63,554 Vol.
$63,554 Vol.
$63,554 Vol.
A qualifying action must create a federal process for reviewing or approving the public release of new artificial intelligence models. A qualifying review process may apply to artificial intelligence models generally, only to models meeting specified criteria (e.g.capability, safety, cybersecurity, national-security, or other risk-based criteria), or to models selected for review at the discretion of the federal government.
Legislation or executive actions which create a group or committee responsible for overseeing artificial intelligence matters will only qualify if they explicitly create a qualifying review process.
Non-binding statements, proposals, unconfirmed reports, or federal review of artificial intelligence models solely for government procurement or internal government use will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: May 4, 2026, 7:47 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A qualifying action must create a federal process for reviewing or approving the public release of new artificial intelligence models. A qualifying review process may apply to artificial intelligence models generally, only to models meeting specified criteria (e.g.capability, safety, cybersecurity, national-security, or other risk-based criteria), or to models selected for review at the discretion of the federal government.
Legislation or executive actions which create a group or committee responsible for overseeing artificial intelligence matters will only qualify if they explicitly create a qualifying review process.
Non-binding statements, proposals, unconfirmed reports, or federal review of artificial intelligence models solely for government procurement or internal government use will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Recent announcements from the Commerce Department and National Institute of Standards and Technology have established voluntary pre-release testing partnerships with Google, Microsoft, and xAI, yet these fall short of a formal presidential order directing broad federal reviews of all advanced AI models by May 31. The administration’s earlier focus on preempting state-level AI rules and promoting a national policy framework has not extended to mandatory oversight timelines, while recent statements indicate ongoing internal study rather than imminent action. With the deadline just two weeks away and no executive order or directive announced, traders see limited room for a sudden shift, especially given the administration’s historical emphasis on minimizing regulatory burdens for frontier AI development.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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