
Using artificial intelligence to replace some of the government workforce might be one way for the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to compensate for the lost workforce, assuming the new plan it's hatching works. It might also be the latest controversy related to DOGE in the department's short history. That's because we're still in the early days of AI, and chatbots can't fully replace humans with any degree of reliability.
Still, DOGE will deploy a GSAi (or GSA Chat) program to as many as 1,500 federal workers, with plans to make it available to over 10,000 GSA employees — which accounts for the agency's entire workforce. The GSA is the General Services Administration, a US government branch that manages contracts and services worth over $100 billion.
The development of GSAi began last year under the Biden administration as a test program with specific guardrails in place. The Trump administration has already repealed Biden's executive order on AI safety and aggressively accelerated the development and deployment of GSAi.
The post DOGE might replace some government workers with AI appeared first on BGR.
Today's Top Deals
- Amazon gift card deals, offers & coupons 2025: Get $450+ free
- Today’s deals: $20 waterproof Bluetooth speaker, $8.50 bed pillows, $399 Google Pixel 8a, more
- Today’s deals: First iPad 11 discount, free aosu security camera, Breville espresso machine, more
- Best Fire TV Stick deals for March 2025