CYAIAug 11, 2025

Do AI Companies Make Good on Voluntary Commitments to the White House?

arXiv:2508.08345v22 citationsh-index: 13Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses accountability in AI governance for policymakers and companies, highlighting structural shortcomings in voluntary commitments.

The study assessed how major AI companies fulfill their voluntary commitments to the White House by scoring them based on public disclosures, finding an average score of 53% with significant variation, such as OpenAI at 83% and poor performance in model weight security at 17%.

Voluntary commitments are central to international AI governance, as demonstrated by recent voluntary guidelines from the White House to the G7, from Bletchley Park to Seoul. How do major AI companies make good on their commitments? We score companies based on their publicly disclosed behavior by developing a detailed rubric based on their eight voluntary commitments to the White House in 2023. We find significant heterogeneity: while the highest-scoring company (OpenAI) scores a 83% overall on our rubric, the average score across all companies is just 53%. The companies demonstrate systemically poor performance for their commitment to model weight security with an average score of 17%: 11 of the 16 companies receive 0% for this commitment. Our analysis highlights a clear structural shortcoming that future AI governance initiatives should correct: when companies make public commitments, they should proactively disclose how they meet their commitments to provide accountability, and these disclosures should be verifiable. To advance policymaking on corporate AI governance, we provide three directed recommendations that address underspecified commitments, the role of complex AI supply chains, and public transparency that could be applied towards AI governance initiatives worldwide.

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