News

Despite President Trump's promise of cuts, the federal government has spent more than $200 billion more in his first 100 days than the same time period last year.
Here are the top stories involving the U.S. government this past week.
OpenAI has agreed to offer its AI models to US federal agencies from 2026 for a symbolic annual fee of US$1. This move is part of the White House AI Action Plan, aimed at boosting AI adoption in ...
In a series of actions this week, the president sought to expand the government’s reach.
Amazon Web Services has agreed to provide U.S. government agencies with up to $1 billion in savings for cloud adoption, modernization and training through the end of 2028, the U.S. General ...
OpenAI and the US General Services Administration have brokered an unprecedented deal, granting federal agencies access to the company's ChatGPT Enterprise service for the nominal cost of ...
The U.S. government just signed a $1 deal with OpenAI to bring ChatGPT to federal agencies. Here's what it means for AI’s future in government.
Two sections of Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution have disappeared on an official government website.
OpenAI announced an agreement to supply more than 2 million workers for the US federal executive branch access to ChatGPT and related tools at practically no cost: just $1 per agency for one year.
OpenAI is partnering with the US government to make its leading frontier models available to federal employees. Under the agreement, federal agencies can access OpenAI’s models for $1 for the ...
Why it might be time to look beyond U.S. stocks: A guide for federal retirees The Thrift Savings Plan offers federal employees the ability to diversify their investments to international markets ...
For the first time since revealing last week that the Trump administration began freezing its federal research funding, the University of California, Los Angeles has put a number on how much is at ...