- Researchers were able to access a now removed GitHub -Dedplan
- The site showed plans for an AI site for the US Government
- It will apparently also include a chatbot and implementation tools
A seemingly leaked github -side has revealed that the Trump administration is working on a site called AI.Gov to be launched on July 4 for the purpose of trying to “speed up government innovation with AI”
The site was uncovered by 404 media Researchers after an early version of the site were sent on GitHub by General Services Administration (GSA), Registered Reports.
Now taken down, the site had been aimed at serving as a hub for state agencies to enable AI integration in their processes.
Technical expenses
The GSA department responsible for the site seems to be Technology Transformation Service (TTS).
Leading up by Thomas Shedd, a close connection to Elon Musk, TTS will apparently launch the AI website with three key components; A chatbot, an “all-in-one” API that enables connections between existing systems and AI models from anthropic, Google or Openai and ‘Console’ — “pioneering tools to analyze the implementation of the agency’s coverage”, according to the page.
The initial staging site suggests that the AI.GOV -Websted will serve AI models through Amazon Bedrock, and most of the models listed in the API documentation on the GitHub page are Fedramp -certified for government use, the researchers confirmed.
However, they note that a model identified and listed from the AI company is not a fat -certified.
The fact that the US government plans to exploit AI or increase its relations with AI companies is likely to not come as much of a surprise to anyone -with the Trump administration that pushes hard for widespread government admission.
Earlier in 2025, it was announced that the IRS could use AI to replace fired workers according to mass information in the hands of the Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.
Other departments such as SEC and VA are reportedly stiffening for ‘restructuring’ as the department investigated whether AI can be used to replace human workers across a number of government departments.