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Find similar grantsResponsible AI Safety and Education Act is sponsored by State of New York. Imposes transparency, safety, and reporting requirements on developers of large frontier AI models; exempts accredited colleges and universities engaged in academic research.
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Guide to the RAISE Act, the New York Responsible AI Safety and Education Act — Transparency Coalition. Legislation for Transparency in AI Now. Guide to the RAISE Act, the New York Responsible AI Safety and Education Act AI News New York RAISE Act Guide The RAISE Act, passed by the New York legislature on June 12, now awaits approval or veto on the desk of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
(Photo: Office of Governor Kathy Hochul) The RAISE Act, approved by the New York State legislature on June 12, is one of the most significant AI bills passed during the 2025 legislative season. The Transparency Coalition has organized this guide to the Act, which still awaits a signature or veto from Gov. Kathy Hochul, to offer a plain-language overview of the legislation.
The Responsible AI Safety and Education Act (RAISE Act, S 6953B) focuses on ensuring the safety of AI models that cost more than $100 million to train or exceed a certain computational power. The legislation aims to prevent future AI models from unleashing “critical harm,” defined as the serious injury or death of 100 or more people or at least $1 billion in damages.
A key focus is ensuring that AI systems aren’t misused to unleash chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear attacks. The RAISE Act would require frontier model developers to establish safety and security protocols, implement safeguards, publish a redacted version of those protocols, and allow state officials access to the unredacted protocols upon request.
New York’s attorney general would enforce the law with fines of up to $10 million for a first violation and up to $30 million for repeat violations. There is no private right of action allowed with regard to violations. The RAISE Act is now with Gov. Kathy Hochul, who must decide whether to sign or veto the measure by July 18.
Read the latest version of the RAISE Act here , or click on the image below to download a pdf. Select image to access the RAISE Act as approved by the New York Legislature on June 12, 2025. what’s covered by the raise act: ‘frontier models’ only The RAISE Act is intended to prevent the largest frontier AI models from unleashing critical harm.
A frontier model is defined in the RAISE Act as an AI model trained using more than 10>26 computational operations, at a compute cost of more than $100 million; or an AI model produced by applying knowledge distillation to a frontier model. (Knowledge distillation is a way to use outputs from a large frontier model to train smaller AI models.)
In non-legal terms, a frontier model is a highly advanced, large-scale AI model that pushes the boundaries of AI in areas like NLP, image generation, video and coding. Frontier models are typically trained on extensive datasets with billions or even trillions of parameters. As of June 2025 there were only a handful of AI models that are considered frontier models.
They include: ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI Claude, developed by Anthropic Copilot, developed by Microsoft Gemini, developed by Google Mistral, developed by Mistral AI Deepseek, developed by Deepseek the ‘critical harm’ the act means to prevent Critical harm means the death or serious injury of 100 more more people, or at least $1 billion of damage to property or money, caused by or materially enabled by a frontier model.
Critical harm may include the creation or use of a chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear weapon. It may also involve an AI model engaging in conduct that, if it were committed by a human, would constitute a crime specified in New York’s Penal Code. duties of a frontier model developer under the raise act The main requirement under the RAISE Act is to prepare and implement a safety & security protocol.
Pre-release responsibilities: Prior to releasing a frontier model available to consumers in New York State, an AI developer must: Implement a written safety & security protocol. Retain an unredacted copy of the safety & security protocol, including revisions, for as long as the frontier model is deployed plus five years.
Publish a copy of the safety & security protocol with appropriate redactions, and grant access to the unredacted copy (upon request) to the New York State Attorney General and the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services.
(‘Appropriate redactions’ may be made to protect public safety, protect trade secrets, prevent the release of confidential information as required by law, protect employee/customer privacy, or prevent the release of information otherwise controlled by state or federal law.)
Post-release responsibilities: Following the release of a frontier model, the model’s developer is required to conduct an annual review of safety & security protocols. Disclosure of safety incidents Large developers are required to disclose any safety incident affecting the frontier model to the New York State Attorney General and the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services.
This disclosure must be made within 72 hours of the developer learning of the incident. truth in statements and disclosures Large developers are prohibited from knowingly making false or materially misleading statements or omissions in, or regarding, documents dealing with safety & security protocols and the disclosure of safety incidents.
enforcement and penalties The RAISE Act will be enforced by the New York State Attorney General, who may bring a civil action against a developer for violation of the RAISE Act. First-time violations may be assessed a civil penalty not exceeding $10 million. Subsequent violation penalties are capped at $30 million.
The RAISE Act does not allow a private right of action associated with violations. If the RAISE Act is signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul, the Act will take effect 90 days after her signature. AI Legislative Update: June 5, 2026 Every Friday, TCAI brings you the nation’s most comprehensive update of AI bills moving through state legislatures.
This week: Vermont banned therapy bots. Illinois lawmakers sent five AI bills to Gov. Pritzer prior to adjourning. California legislators moved 30 AI bills forward in second-chamber committees, and AI bills appear to be finally moving in New York and Rhode Island.
New York lawmakers embrace bill to ban AI chatbots in toys; California considering it too Alarmed by the release of untested and developmentally harmful chatbot toys, legislators in New York and California have proposed a five-year moratorium on their manufacture and sale. Illinois legislature adjourns at 4:30 a. m.
after sending five AI bills to Gov. Pritzker Lawmakers approved a landmark frontier model safety act, restricted the use of AI in healthcare decisions, banned AI-enabled rental price fixing, and prohibited AI bots from snapping up all the good tickets. AI Legislative Update: June 20, 2025 New York lawmakers approve the RAISE Act to prevent ‘critical harm’ caused by AI
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Accredited colleges and universities in New York State engaged in academic research. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Applications for Responsible AI Safety and Education Act are due January 1, 2027. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Responsible AI Safety and Education Act is funded by State of New York. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in New York. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
New York Providing Local Access to Essential Sustenance (NY PLATES) capital grant program is sponsored by New York State (administered by Dormitory Authority of the State of New York in partnership with the New York State Department of Health's Division of Nutrition). This capital grant program supports food banks, emergency food programs, and municipalities providing food relief services in New York.
NY PLATES capital grant program is sponsored by New York State (administered by Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY)). The NY PLATES capital grant program provides funding to food banks and emergency food assistance organizations in New York State to build modern facilities, purchase equipment (like refrigeration units and food transport vehicles), and improve infrastructure to better serve fami…
NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship Program is a grant from NVIDIA providing up to $60,000 per award to PhD students conducting research that advances accelerated computing and its applications. Now in its 25th year, the program invites nominations from doctoral students pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, and related fields. Recipients receive not only research funding but also access to NVIDIA technology, products, and engineering expertise, along with a mandatory in-person summer internship. Students are nominated by their faculty advisors and selected based on academic achievement and research area alignment.
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NIST SBIR Phase I - Advanced Manufacturing and Robotics is sponsored by National Institute of Standards and Technology. NIST SBIR Phase I - Advanced Manufacturing and Robotics is a grant from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) that funds small businesses with innovative research and technology ideas in advanced manufacturing and robotics.
NYSERDA's $50M expansion of clean energy workforce funding runs through November 2027 and September 2030. The two tracks have radically different competition levels, cost shares, and award sizes — and the wrong choice will kill an otherwise strong application.
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