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ChatGPT Gov is designed to handle sensitive data in “secure environments”
OpenAI has launched a dedicated ChatGPT client for the US government, aiming to allow agencies to enter sensitive information into artificial intelligence models in “secure environments,” following the success of its Chinese rival DeepSeek.
Government employees are already among ChatGPT’s most active users, according to OpenAI. Since January 2024, more than 90,000 individuals across 3,500 federal, state, and local agencies have made over 18 million queries, the company said.
“By making our products available to the US government, we aim to ensure AI serves the national interest and the public good, aligned with democratic values, while empowering policymakers to responsibly integrate these capabilities to deliver better services to the American people,” OpenAI stated on Tuesday.
Read moreThe new platform, ChatGPT Gov, is built on OpenAI’s “flagship” GPT-4o model, which the company says excels in text interpretation, summarization, coding, image analysis, and mathematics.
ChatGPT Gov will operate within government-secured hosting environments, including Microsoft Azure’s commercial and government cloud servers. This setup will allow agencies to “manage their own security, privacy, and compliance requirements,” OpenAI’s government sales lead, Felipe Millon, told reporters during a press call.
OpenAI’s announcement comes just as President Donald Trump dubbed the success of its Chinese competitor a “wake-up call” for US tech companies.
Read moreThe Hangzhou-based start-up DeepSeek released its AI Assistant app earlier this month, and by this week it had become the most downloaded free app on the US Apple App Store. DeepSeek’s V3 and R1 models are seen as direct competitors to OpenAI’s GPT-4o and o1 reasoning models. Word that a Chinese startup has managed to create a competitive AI model without access to cutting-edge US chips and at a fraction of the cost has caused a stir in the global stock markets, with shares of energy and chip-making companies taking a beating on Monday.
While OpenAI claims that ChatGPT Gov will allow US agencies to process “non-public, sensitive information,” the platform itself has not yet been certified by the US government. According to Digital Trends, ChatGPT Enterprise – the framework on which ChatGPT Gov is based – has not yet been approved by the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) for handling non-public data. OpenAI acknowledged this, stating that it “believes this infrastructure will expedite internal authorization.”