The White House is under pressure to revise an artificial intelligence order after a previous framework was abruptly shelved by the U.S. President. Cybersecurity experts emphasize that the need for a federal review process for frontier models remains, despite the change in administration. The original order aimed to create a framework for addressing risks associated with artificial intelligence, and its absence leaves a regulatory gap. Experts argue that the federal government must work with frontier model makers to mitigate potential risks, including those related to data security and bias. The lack of a clear regulatory framework may lead to compliance challenges for companies like Intel, which must navigate evolving requirements1. As a result, practitioners must stay vigilant and assess regulatory developments to stay ahead of potential compliance requirements, so what matters most is that organizations prioritize early assessment to gain a competitive advantage in managing AI-related risks.