Week of 6 July 2026
NIST and CAISI are developing secure AI data centre standards, with a virtual workshop on 22-23 July 2026.
Key points
- Workshop covers architecture, supply chain security, agentic AI workflows, and regulatory compliance for AI data centres.
- An overseas event announcement with no immediate Australian regulatory parallel - moderate monitoring value only.
Week of 8 June 2026
NIST mathematician proves no finite set of AI guardrails can be universally robust against adversarial prompts.
Key points
- The proof implies APS agencies cannot rely on static safety controls alone for deployed AI systems.
- Vassilev recommends continuous red-teaming, iterative guardrail updates, and operational resilience as mitigations.
Week of 25 May 2026
NIST renames AISIC to 'NIST Artificial Intelligence Consortium', shifting focus toward AI measurement, innovation, and adoption.
Key points
- Six task groups will work on TEVV standards, bias, documentation cards, and chemical/biological security - outputs may shape international AI standards.
- Reorientation reflects US policy shift under EO 14179 toward AI competitiveness over safety-first framing.
Week of 18 May 2026
NIST NCCoE is hosting a June 9 webinar on Privacy-Enhancing Technologies testbed and Dioptra AI security platform.
Key points
- Work focuses on securing AI model training on sensitive genomic data using differential privacy and federated learning.
- Niche technical event with limited direct APS applicability; useful context for AI privacy and security practitioners.
Week of 11 May 2026
NIST NCCoE is running a virtual working series to refine the Cybersecurity Framework Cyber AI Profile.
Key points
- Session 3 focuses on usability across AI roles - users, developers, and deployers - and delivery formats.
- This is a US standards development event; limited direct APS participation value but output worth tracking.
Week of 4 May 2026
NIST's CAISI formalises pre-deployment AI evaluation agreements with Google DeepMind, Microsoft, and xAI.
Key points
- Evaluations include models with reduced safeguards, classified environments, and an interagency national security taskforce.
- Over 40 evaluations completed to date, including on unreleased state-of-the-art models - a significant US government capability.
NIST NCCoE is running a virtual working series to refine the Cybersecurity Framework Cyber AI Profile.
Key points
- Session 2 focuses on extending technical content, specifically Agentic AI and Zero Trust integration.
- The Profile is a US-led instrument; Australian agencies may find it useful as a reference rather than a mandate.
Week of 27 April 2026
NIST is convening a workshop to develop shared standards and taxonomy for AI incident management and response.
Key points
- Outputs will inform CAISI guidelines and America's AI Action Plan - likely to shape global standards Australia monitors.
- Overseas event announcement; direct APS relevance depends on whether NIST outputs influence Australian incident frameworks.
NIST NCCoE is running a virtual working series to refine the CSF Cyber AI Profile through public input.
Key points
- The Profile aims to help organisations manage cybersecurity risks arising from AI adoption - directly relevant to APS AI risk frameworks.
- This is an event announcement for a past session; direct APS participation is unlikely but outputs are worth monitoring.
NIST and Red Hat are co-hosting a US cybersecurity forum with an AI security theme in Washington D.C.
Key points
- Forum themes include cybersecurity for AI systems, outcome-oriented security frameworks, and supply chain threats.
- US-focused event with no direct Australian participation or output scheduled - limited immediate APS relevance.
NIST is hosting a two-day workshop on AI in manufacturing, covering agentic AI, foundation models, and standards gaps.
Key points
- A key output is a prioritised recommendations report informing a forthcoming NIST Advanced Manufacturing Series publication on AI standards.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal agencies - useful context for standards-tracking teams only.
NIST's Iris Experts Group holds its annual meeting to discuss iris recognition for US government agencies.
Key points
- Meeting covers government project updates and academic, commercial, and government R&D presentations.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal agencies - included for context only.
Week of 20 April 2026
NIST NCCoE webinar covers SP 1800-42A, a practice guide on mobile driver's licence adoption for financial institutions.
Key points
- The guide addresses digital identity verification flows to reduce cybersecurity and fraud risks - not AI-specific.
- Limited direct relevance to APS AI governance work; digital identity is an adjacent but distinct domain.
Week of 13 April 2026
NIST-linked workshop applies machine learning to X-ray and neutron scattering research, held in Washington DC.
Key points
- Specialist scientific conference with no direct AI governance, policy, or APS operational relevance.
- Low signal for APS readers; this is a domain-specific research event, not an AI governance development.
Week of 30 March 2026
NIST is hosting a two-day workshop on IoT cybersecurity future directions, including AI integration themes.
Key points
- The workshop will inform an update to NIST SP 800-213, the federal IoT cybersecurity guidance standard.
- AI is one thread among several IoT topics; limited direct relevance to APS AI governance work.
Week of 23 March 2026
NIST NCCoE releases a live DevSecOps guidance document implementing the Secure Software Development Framework (SSDF).
Key points
- The guidance covers DevSecOps pipelines in commercial environments, including a Microsoft Azure reference implementation.
- AI is not a subject of this item; it is a cybersecurity/software development standard with no direct AI governance content.
Week of 16 March 2026
NIST is convening a workshop on using AI, model-based methods, and ontologies to modernise standards development processes.
Key points
- The initiative addresses how traditional standards bodies can keep pace with AI and other rapidly evolving technologies.
- This is an event announcement with no published outputs yet - limited immediate signal for APS practitioners.
NIST NCCoE published draft SP 1800-42A on mobile driver's licence implementation for financial institutions.
Key points
- The guide covers reference architecture, threat modelling, and regulatory mapping for mDL adoption - not AI-focused.
- Limited direct AI relevance; this is a digital identity standards item with only peripheral connection to AI governance.
Week of 9 March 2026
NIST workshop focuses on building an Open Knowledge Network for US supply chain resilience and visibility.
Key points
- The event covers water supply, manufacturing contracts, and freight transportation scenarios - not AI governance.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal AI policy or APS AI governance work.
Week of 9 February 2026
NIST NCCoE has released draft SP 1800-39 on data classification practices, open for comment until 30 March 2026.
Key points
- The publication frames data classification as foundational to secure AI model training, Zero Trust, and quantum-safe cryptography.
- Limited direct relevance to APS AI governance work; primarily a US data-security standard with peripheral AI framing.
NIST allocates $3.19 million across eight US small businesses under its Phase II SBIR program.
Key points
- AI features in two projects: biopharmaceutical cell-culture monitoring and an OT cybersecurity compliance scoring tool.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal agencies - US domestic R&D funding announcement included for context only.
Week of 2 February 2026
NIST's NCCoE is consulting on a concept paper addressing identity, authorisation, and auditing of AI agents.
Key points
- The paper seeks input on use cases, standards, and controls including prompt injection mitigations for agentic AI.
- Public comment closes 2 April 2026; Australian agencies with agentic AI programs could contribute or observe.
Week of 26 January 2026
NIST is hosting a workshop to develop a Semiconductor Development Life Cycle Security Framework for trusted microelectronics.
Key points
- Hardware security standards emerging from this process could eventually influence Australian procurement and supply chain policy.
- AI is mentioned as one of several protected system types - this is primarily a hardware security and semiconductor standards item.
Week of 19 January 2026
NIST's NCCoE has released its inaugural Project Portfolio outlining active cybersecurity research priorities and projects.
Key points
- The portfolio covers US cybersecurity innovation broadly; AI-specific content is not confirmed as a primary focus.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal agencies - included for context as a US standards-body output.
Week of 12 January 2026
NIST NCCoE hosted a hybrid workshop on 14 January 2026 to develop its Cyber AI Profile under the Cybersecurity Framework.
Key points
- The preliminary Cyber AI Profile and SP 800-53 COSAiS overlay are open for public comment until 30 January 2026.
- This is a past event with a closed comment window - limited immediate action available for APS readers.