bmad-plus 0.7.5 → 0.8.0

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (294) hide show
  1. package/CHANGELOG.md +450 -425
  2. package/LICENSE +21 -21
  3. package/README.md +555 -447
  4. package/osint-agent-package/README.md +88 -88
  5. package/osint-agent-package/SETUP_KEYS.md +108 -108
  6. package/osint-agent-package/agents/osint-investigator.md +80 -80
  7. package/osint-agent-package/install.ps1 +87 -87
  8. package/osint-agent-package/install.sh +76 -76
  9. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/SKILL.md +147 -147
  10. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/SKILL.md +452 -452
  11. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/assets/dossier-template.md +116 -116
  12. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/references/content-extraction.md +100 -100
  13. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/references/enrichment-databases-fr.md +148 -148
  14. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/references/platforms.md +130 -130
  15. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/references/psychoprofile.md +69 -69
  16. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/references/tools.md +281 -281
  17. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/_http.py +101 -101
  18. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/apify.py +266 -260
  19. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/brightdata.py +101 -101
  20. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/diagnose.py +141 -141
  21. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/exa.py +79 -79
  22. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/jina.py +71 -71
  23. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/mcp-client.py +136 -136
  24. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/parallel.py +85 -85
  25. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/perplexity.py +102 -102
  26. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/tavily.py +72 -72
  27. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigate/osint/scripts/volley.py +208 -208
  28. package/osint-agent-package/skills/bmad-osint-investigator/SKILL.md +15 -15
  29. package/package.json +62 -57
  30. package/readme-international/README.de.md +576 -426
  31. package/readme-international/README.es.md +578 -518
  32. package/readme-international/README.fr.md +576 -516
  33. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-architect-dev/SKILL.md +96 -96
  34. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-architect-dev/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  35. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-maker/SKILL.md +201 -201
  36. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-maker/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  37. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-orchestrator/SKILL.md +137 -137
  38. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-orchestrator/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  39. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-quality/SKILL.md +83 -83
  40. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-quality/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  41. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-shadow/SKILL.md +71 -71
  42. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-shadow/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  43. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-strategist/SKILL.md +80 -80
  44. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/agent-strategist/bmad-skill-manifest.yaml +13 -13
  45. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-animated/animated-website-agent.md +325 -325
  46. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-animated/templates/animated-website-workflow.md +55 -55
  47. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-backup/backup-agent.md +71 -71
  48. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-backup/templates/backup-workflow.md +51 -51
  49. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/SKILL.md +171 -171
  50. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/checklist.md +140 -140
  51. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/pagespeed-playbook.md +320 -320
  52. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/audit-schema.json +187 -187
  53. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/cwv-thresholds.md +87 -87
  54. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/eeat-criteria.md +123 -123
  55. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/geo-signals.md +167 -167
  56. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/hreflang-rules.md +153 -153
  57. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/quality-gates.md +133 -133
  58. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/schema-catalog.md +91 -91
  59. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/ref/schema-templates.json +356 -356
  60. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/seo-chief.md +294 -294
  61. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/seo-judge.md +241 -241
  62. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/seo-scout.md +171 -171
  63. package/src/bmad-plus/agents/pack-seo/templates/seo-audit-workflow.md +241 -241
  64. package/src/bmad-plus/data/role-triggers.yaml +209 -209
  65. package/src/bmad-plus/module-help.csv +10 -10
  66. package/src/bmad-plus/module.yaml +283 -280
  67. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-animated/animated-website-agent.md +325 -0
  68. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-animated/templates/animated-website-workflow.md +55 -0
  69. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-backup/backup-agent.md +71 -0
  70. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-backup/templates/backup-workflow.md +51 -0
  71. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/README.md +162 -162
  72. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/analyst-agent.md +73 -73
  73. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/document-project.md +61 -61
  74. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/domain-research.md +95 -95
  75. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/market-research.md +95 -95
  76. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/prfaq.md +134 -134
  77. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/product-brief.md +80 -80
  78. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/tech-writer-agent.md +73 -73
  79. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/analysis/technical-research.md +95 -95
  80. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/architect-agent.md +73 -73
  81. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/create-architecture.md +73 -73
  82. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/create-epics-stories.md +92 -92
  83. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/generate-project-context.md +80 -80
  84. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/implementation-readiness.md +90 -90
  85. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-01-init.md +153 -153
  86. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-01b-continue.md +173 -173
  87. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-02-context.md +224 -224
  88. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-03-starter.md +329 -329
  89. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-04-decisions.md +318 -318
  90. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-05-patterns.md +359 -359
  91. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-06-structure.md +379 -379
  92. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-07-validation.md +361 -361
  93. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/architecture/steps/step-08-complete.md +81 -81
  94. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/checkpoint-preview.md +67 -67
  95. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/code-review-steps/step-01-gather-context.md +85 -85
  96. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/code-review-steps/step-02-review.md +35 -35
  97. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/code-review-steps/step-03-triage.md +49 -49
  98. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/code-review-steps/step-04-present.md +131 -131
  99. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/code-review.md +89 -89
  100. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/correct-course.md +300 -300
  101. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/create-story.md +428 -428
  102. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/dev-agent.md +73 -73
  103. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/dev-story-checklist.md +80 -80
  104. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/dev-story.md +484 -484
  105. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/investigate.md +193 -193
  106. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/qa-e2e-tests.md +175 -175
  107. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/quick-dev.md +110 -110
  108. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/retrospective.md +1511 -1511
  109. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/sprint-planning.md +298 -298
  110. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/implementation/sprint-status.md +296 -296
  111. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/create-prd.md +29 -29
  112. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/create-ux-design.md +74 -74
  113. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/edit-prd.md +29 -29
  114. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/pm-agent.md +73 -73
  115. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/prd.md +89 -89
  116. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/ux-designer-agent.md +73 -73
  117. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/planning/validate-prd.md +29 -29
  118. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/advanced-elicitation.md +141 -141
  119. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/adversarial-review.md +37 -37
  120. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/bmad-help.md +75 -75
  121. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/brainstorming.md +6 -6
  122. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/customize.md +110 -110
  123. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/distillator.md +176 -176
  124. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/edge-case-hunter.md +67 -67
  125. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/editorial-review-prose.md +86 -86
  126. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/editorial-review-structure.md +179 -179
  127. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/index-docs.md +66 -66
  128. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/party-mode.md +127 -127
  129. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/categories/utilities/shard-doc.md +105 -105
  130. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/dev-studio-orchestrator.md +120 -120
  131. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/shared/architecture-decision-template.md +12 -12
  132. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/shared/bwml-spec.md +328 -328
  133. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/shared/module-help.csv +32 -32
  134. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-dev-studio/upstream-sync.yaml +81 -81
  135. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/README.md +106 -106
  136. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/memory-orchestrator.md +79 -79
  137. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/shared/karpathy-guardrails.md +86 -86
  138. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/shared/memory-protocol.md +143 -143
  139. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/context.md +39 -39
  140. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/decisions.md +25 -25
  141. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/identity.yaml +39 -39
  142. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/lessons.md +31 -31
  143. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/patterns.md +24 -24
  144. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/templates/session-handoff.md +25 -25
  145. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-memory/zecher-agent.md +157 -157
  146. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/SKILL.md +171 -0
  147. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/checklist.md +140 -0
  148. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/pagespeed-playbook.md +320 -0
  149. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/audit-schema.json +187 -0
  150. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/cwv-thresholds.md +87 -0
  151. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/eeat-criteria.md +123 -0
  152. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/geo-signals.md +167 -0
  153. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/hreflang-rules.md +153 -0
  154. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/quality-gates.md +133 -0
  155. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/schema-catalog.md +91 -0
  156. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/ref/schema-templates.json +356 -0
  157. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/seo-chief.md +294 -0
  158. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/seo-judge.md +241 -0
  159. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/seo-scout.md +171 -0
  160. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-seo/templates/seo-audit-workflow.md +241 -0
  161. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/README.md +110 -110
  162. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/accessibility-esg/csrd-agent.md +262 -262
  163. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/accessibility-esg/section508-agent.md +179 -179
  164. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/accessibility-esg/wcag-agent.md +201 -201
  165. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/ai-governance/eu-ai-act-agent.md +97 -97
  166. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/ai-governance/iso42001-agent.md +251 -251
  167. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/ai-governance/nist-ai-rmf-agent.md +133 -133
  168. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/cis-controls-agent.md +221 -221
  169. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/ism-agent.md +150 -150
  170. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/iso27001-agent.md +167 -167
  171. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/nis2-agent.md +83 -83
  172. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/nist-800-53-agent.md +250 -250
  173. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/cybersecurity/nist-csf-agent.md +218 -218
  174. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/data-privacy/ccpa-agent.md +94 -94
  175. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/data-privacy/dpdpa-agent.md +136 -136
  176. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/data-privacy/gdpr-agent.md +296 -296
  177. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/data-privacy/iso27701-agent.md +134 -134
  178. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/data-privacy/lgpd-agent.md +129 -129
  179. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/defense-export/cmmc-agent.md +127 -127
  180. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/defense-export/ear-agent.md +272 -272
  181. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/defense-export/itar-agent.md +202 -202
  182. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/defense-export/tsa-agent.md +367 -367
  183. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/dora-agent.md +510 -510
  184. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/fedramp-agent.md +247 -247
  185. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/hipaa-agent.md +173 -173
  186. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/pci-dss-agent.md +239 -239
  187. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/soc2-agent.md +266 -266
  188. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/industry-compliance/swift-csp-agent.md +164 -164
  189. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/ai-act-classifier.md +131 -131
  190. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/ai-act-fria.md +155 -155
  191. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/ai-act-incidents.md +187 -187
  192. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/ai-act-roles.md +113 -113
  193. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/breach-sentinel.md +197 -197
  194. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/cookie-policy-gen.md +180 -180
  195. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/dpia-sentinel.md +235 -235
  196. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/legitimate-interest.md +159 -159
  197. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/privacy-advisor.md +133 -133
  198. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/privacy-notice-gen.md +160 -160
  199. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/categories/workflows/privacy-policy-gen.md +135 -135
  200. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/ccpa/ccpa-gdpr-comparison.md +117 -117
  201. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/ccpa/consumer-rights-workflows.md +177 -177
  202. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cis-controls/framework-mappings.md +162 -162
  203. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cis-controls/implementation-guidance.md +235 -235
  204. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cis-controls/safeguards-detail.md +252 -252
  205. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cmmc/cmmc-assessment.md +170 -170
  206. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cmmc/cmmc-levels.md +113 -113
  207. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/cmmc/cmmc-practices.md +211 -211
  208. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/csrd/compliance-program.md +281 -281
  209. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/csrd/double-materiality.md +253 -253
  210. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/csrd/esrs-standards.md +401 -401
  211. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dora/article-reference.md +441 -441
  212. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dora/incident-classification.md +297 -297
  213. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dora/rts-its-guide.md +306 -306
  214. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dora/third-party-risk.md +349 -349
  215. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dpdpa/gdpr-comparison.md +173 -173
  216. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dpdpa/rights-and-obligations.md +426 -426
  217. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dpdpa/rules-2025.md +599 -599
  218. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/dpdpa/sections-reference.md +319 -319
  219. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/ear/ccl-eccn-guide.md +250 -250
  220. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/ear/compliance-program.md +280 -280
  221. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/ear/license-exceptions.md +207 -207
  222. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/eu-ai-act/gpai-governance.md +267 -267
  223. package/src/bmad-plus/packs/pack-shield/references/eu-ai-act/obligations-high-risk.md +287 -287
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@@ -1,361 +1,361 @@
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- # NIST AI RMF 1.0 — Full Category and Subcategory Reference
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-
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- Source: NIST AI 100-1 (January 2023) and the AI RMF Playbook (NIST AI 100-1 Playbook)
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-
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- ---
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-
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- ## GOVERN Function (6 Categories, 21 Subcategories)
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-
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- GOVERN establishes the organizational culture, policies, accountability, and risk tolerance that underpin all other functions. It should be addressed first and revisited continuously.
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- ### GV-1: Policies, Processes, Procedures and Practices in Place
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- **Purpose:** Ensure the organization has formalized policies and processes for AI risk management across the full AI lifecycle.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-1.1 | AI risk management is integrated into the organization's broader enterprise risk management (ERM) processes |
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- | GV-1.2 | The characteristics of trustworthy AI are integrated into organizational policies, processes, and practices |
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- | GV-1.3 | Organizational risk tolerance for AI is established, communicated, and reflected in AI policies |
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- | GV-1.4 | Organizational teams are committed to a culture of risk awareness and continuous improvement |
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- | GV-1.5 | Organizational policies for AI risk management are reviewed and updated on a periodic cadence |
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- | GV-1.6 | Policies for complying with applicable AI laws, regulations, and standards are established |
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- | GV-1.7 | Processes for regular review of AI risk policies to incorporate emerging AI risks are established |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Publish an organization-wide AI Risk Management Policy signed by senior leadership
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- - Define AI risk appetite statements (e.g., acceptable false positive rates, bias thresholds)
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- - Incorporate AI risk into existing ERM committee agendas and quarterly reviews
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- - Establish a policy review cycle (minimum annual) with a designated AI risk owner
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-
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- ---
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-
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- ### GV-2: Accountability Structures
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- **Purpose:** Assign clear ownership of AI risk management decisions at the organizational level.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-2.1 | Roles and responsibilities for AI risk management across organizational levels are documented |
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- | GV-2.2 | The organization designates senior officials accountable for AI risk outcomes |
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- | GV-2.3 | Executive leadership understands AI risk and fosters an accountable culture |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Appoint an AI Risk Owner or Chief AI Officer with board-level reporting
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- - Define RACI for AI development, deployment, and monitoring decisions
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- - Include AI risk in executive performance goals and leadership dashboards
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- ---
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- ### GV-3: Roles and Responsibilities
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- **Purpose:** Identify and define all roles involved in AI design, development, deployment, and evaluation.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-3.1 | AI risk management roles span the entire AI lifecycle from design through decommission |
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- | GV-3.2 | AI risk responsibilities are defined for development teams, operators, and deployers |
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- | GV-3.3 | Responsibilities for AI risk are assigned to both technical and non-technical roles |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Create an AI roles register mapping each lifecycle stage to responsible team/individual
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- - Ensure business owners (not just engineers) are accountable for deployed AI outcomes
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- - Define responsibilities for external AI vendors and third-party model providers
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- ---
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-
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- ### GV-4: Cross-Functional Team Collaboration
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- **Purpose:** Ensure AI risk management involves diverse perspectives across the organization.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-4.1 | Cross-functional AI risk teams include AI/ML, legal, privacy, security, HR, and ethics functions |
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- | GV-4.2 | Processes for communicating AI risks between teams are documented |
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- | GV-4.3 | Mechanisms for escalating AI risk concerns are established |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Establish an AI Risk Working Group with quarterly cross-functional reviews
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- - Create an AI risk escalation path from development teams to executive leadership
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- - Include privacy, legal, and security representatives in AI system design reviews
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- ---
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- ### GV-5: Organizational Risk Tolerance for AI
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- **Purpose:** Communicate AI risk tolerance and link it to operational decisions.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-5.1 | AI risk tolerance is defined and reflects organizational values |
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- | GV-5.2 | AI risk tolerance is reviewed when new AI systems are deployed or contexts change |
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- | GV-5.3 | Risk tolerance statements inform go/no-go decisions for AI system deployment |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Define risk tolerance per AI system category (e.g., low-stakes recommendations vs. high-stakes decisions affecting individuals)
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- - Create a deployment checklist that validates an AI system against stated risk tolerance before launch
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- - Link risk tolerance to specific bias and accuracy thresholds in testing requirements
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- ---
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- ### GV-6: AI Risk Aligned to Laws, Regulations, and Principles
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- **Purpose:** Ensure AI risks and risk management practices align with applicable laws, ethical principles, and industry standards.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | GV-6.1 | Legal and regulatory requirements for AI are identified and tracked |
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- | GV-6.2 | AI risk management processes are aligned with applicable ethical principles |
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- | GV-6.3 | The organization engages with emerging AI regulations on a proactive basis |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Maintain a regulatory register for applicable AI laws (EU AI Act, state AI laws, sector-specific requirements)
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- - Align AI risk policies to NIST AI 100-1, ISO/IEC 42001, and relevant sector frameworks (FINRA, HIPAA, etc.)
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- - Designate a legal/compliance representative on the AI governance committee
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- ---
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- ## MAP Function (5 Categories, 20 Subcategories)
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- MAP establishes context before risks are measured or managed. A well-executed MAP prevents investing resources in the wrong risk treatments.
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- ### MP-1: Context Is Established
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- **Purpose:** Understand the intended use, operating environment, and affected populations of each AI system.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MP-1.1 | The organization's mission and goals related to AI are documented |
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- | MP-1.2 | Intended uses of the AI system are documented and bounded |
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- | MP-1.3 | The AI system's operating environment and constraints are defined |
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- | MP-1.4 | Affected individuals, groups, communities, and organizations are identified |
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- | MP-1.5 | Potential harms, misuses, and unintended uses are scoped |
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- | MP-1.6 | Legal, regulatory, and contractual constraints are identified |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Produce an AI System Description Document for each deployed system covering: purpose, inputs, outputs, decision authority, operator vs. user roles
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- - Identify affected populations at the beginning of design — not at deployment
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- - Document prohibited use cases explicitly
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- ### MP-2: Scientific Understanding Applied
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- **Purpose:** Apply current scientific understanding of AI capabilities and limitations to the design and risk assessment.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MP-2.1 | AI and ML capabilities and limitations are documented for the specific system type |
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- | MP-2.2 | Assumptions and constraints of the AI system's training data are documented |
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- | MP-2.3 | Uncertainty and variability in AI outputs are characterized |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Document model card or system card information including training data sources, known biases, and performance bounds
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- - Quantify output uncertainty (confidence intervals, calibration metrics) where applicable
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- - Review relevant literature on known failure modes for the model architecture in use
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- ---
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- ### MP-3: Risks and Benefits Mapped to Stakeholders
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- **Purpose:** Identify who benefits from the AI system and who bears its risks — these are often different groups.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MP-3.1 | Benefits and risks are documented for each identified stakeholder group |
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- | MP-3.2 | Affected communities are engaged where feasible to understand perceived risks and benefits |
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- | MP-3.3 | The distribution of benefits vs. risks across stakeholder groups is evaluated |
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- | MP-3.4 | Feedback mechanisms for affected individuals to report harm are established |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Create a stakeholder risk/benefit matrix: rows = stakeholder group, columns = risk type, benefit type
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- - Implement a feedback channel (e.g., complaint form, audit log review) for users to report unexpected outcomes
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- - Conduct equity analysis: which groups are disproportionately affected by errors?
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- ### MP-4: Risks Prioritized
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- **Purpose:** Prioritize identified risks to focus MEASURE and MANAGE resources effectively.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MP-4.1 | Risk prioritization criteria are established (e.g., severity, breadth, reversibility) |
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- | MP-4.2 | Risks are ranked and documented in the AI risk register |
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- | MP-4.3 | Highest-priority risks are escalated to GOVERN for risk tolerance review |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Use a severity × breadth × reversibility scoring model for prioritization
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- - Flag any risk that affects a protected class, creates legal exposure, or is irreversible as high-priority
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- - Review prioritization at each model version update or significant context change
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- ---
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- ### MP-5: Likelihood and Impact Characterized
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- **Purpose:** Characterize the probability and potential severity of identified harms.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MP-5.1 | Likelihood of harm is estimated using historical data, expert judgment, or red-teaming |
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- | MP-5.2 | Potential impact is assessed across physical, psychological, financial, and reputational dimensions |
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- | MP-5.3 | Cumulative and systemic risks (e.g., societal effects of widespread deployment) are considered |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Conduct red-team exercises and adversarial testing to estimate real-world failure rates
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- - Assess impact across harm dimensions: physical safety, financial, psychological, reputational, societal
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- - For large-scale deployments, model aggregate societal effects (e.g., labour market impact of an automated hiring tool)
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- ## MEASURE Function (4 Categories, 16 Subcategories)
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- MEASURE employs quantitative and qualitative tools to evaluate AI risks identified in MAP.
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- ### MS-1: Measurement Approaches Identified
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- **Purpose:** Identify appropriate methods and tools for measuring AI risks.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MS-1.1 | Metrics for each identified risk are defined (technical, operational, and societal) |
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- | MS-1.2 | Measurement approaches are appropriate for the AI system type and deployment context |
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- | MS-1.3 | Gaps in measurement capabilities are documented and addressed |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Define metrics for each trustworthiness property: accuracy, fairness (demographic parity, equalized odds), robustness (adversarial accuracy), explainability (LIME/SHAP scores), privacy (differential privacy ε)
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- - Document measurement tools and their known limitations
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- - Identify where human evaluation is required instead of (or in addition to) automated metrics
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- ### MS-2: AI Systems Evaluated for Trustworthiness
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- **Purpose:** Evaluate AI systems against the trustworthiness properties throughout the lifecycle.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- |-------------|-------------|
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- | MS-2.1 | AI systems are evaluated pre-deployment for technical performance and safety |
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- | MS-2.2 | Bias and fairness testing is conducted across demographic groups |
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- | MS-2.3 | Explainability and interpretability requirements are tested and documented |
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- | MS-2.4 | Security and privacy of the AI system are assessed |
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- | MS-2.5 | Human oversight mechanisms are tested and validated |
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- | MS-2.6 | Evaluation results are documented and shared with relevant stakeholders |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Require pre-deployment evaluation report covering all seven trustworthiness properties
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- - Run disaggregated performance testing across demographic subgroups (age, gender, race, geography)
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- - Test adversarial robustness using standard benchmark datasets relevant to the model type
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- - Document SHAP/LIME explanations for models affecting high-stakes individual decisions
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- ### MS-3: AI Risk Tracked Over Time
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- **Purpose:** Monitor AI risk continuously after deployment to detect drift, degradation, or new harms.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- | MS-3.1 | Ongoing monitoring metrics are defined and implemented post-deployment |
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- | MS-3.2 | Model drift and performance degradation are detected and trigger review |
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- | MS-3.3 | New risks identified post-deployment are fed back into MAP |
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- | MS-3.4 | External signals (regulatory updates, academic findings, media reports) inform monitoring |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Implement model monitoring dashboards tracking accuracy, fairness metrics, and input data distribution
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- - Set alert thresholds that trigger human review (e.g., accuracy drops >5%, demographic parity gap exceeds threshold)
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- - Assign a model owner responsible for monthly monitoring reviews
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- - Subscribe to NIST NVD and relevant AI safety/bias research feeds
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- ### MS-4: Feedback Informs MANAGE
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- **Purpose:** Ensure measurement results directly inform risk treatment decisions in MANAGE.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- | MS-4.1 | Measurement outputs are communicated to decision-makers responsible for MANAGE |
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- | MS-4.2 | Measurement limitations and uncertainties are communicated alongside results |
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- | MS-4.3 | Measurement results are used to update the AI risk register and treatment plans |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Create a measurement-to-action protocol: define which measurement findings trigger which MANAGE actions
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- - Include measurement uncertainty caveats in all AI risk reports
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- - Automate risk register updates from monitoring dashboards where feasible
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- ## MANAGE Function (4 Categories, 18 Subcategories)
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- MANAGE addresses identified AI risks through treatment, monitoring, and improvement.
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- ### MG-1: Risks Prioritized and Documented
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- **Purpose:** Ensure the most impactful AI risks receive treatment resources first.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- | MG-1.1 | AI risk register entries are prioritized and assigned treatment owners |
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- | MG-1.2 | Risk prioritization reflects organizational risk tolerance (GOVERN 1.3) |
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- | MG-1.3 | Residual risks after treatment are documented and accepted by appropriate authority |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Assign a treatment owner, target date, and treatment approach for every risk register entry
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- - Require senior approval for accepting residual risks above the defined risk tolerance threshold
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- - Review residual risk acceptance annually or when significant system changes occur
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- ### MG-2: Strategies Planned and Actioned
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- **Purpose:** Develop and execute risk treatment strategies that reduce AI risk to acceptable levels.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- | MG-2.1 | Risk treatment options are identified (mitigate, transfer, avoid, accept) |
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- | MG-2.2 | Treatment strategies are resourced and implemented |
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- | MG-2.3 | Emergency interventions (e.g., system shutdown) are defined for critical failures |
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- | MG-2.4 | Benefits of AI systems are preserved while reducing risks |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - For each high-priority risk, identify one or more treatment options: technical (retrain, constrain, add human review), operational (restrict use case), contractual (indemnification), or avoidance (decommission)
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- - Define a "kill switch" or emergency shutdown procedure for AI systems affecting safety
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- - Document benefit-risk tradeoffs for any accepted risk
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- ### MG-3: Risk Responses Monitored and Adjusted
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- **Purpose:** Ensure risk treatments remain effective over time and adapt to changing conditions.
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- | Subcategory | Description |
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- | MG-3.1 | Effectiveness of risk treatments is monitored using defined metrics |
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- | MG-3.2 | AI incidents are documented, reported, and investigated |
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- | MG-3.3 | Lessons learned from incidents are applied to future risk management |
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- | MG-3.4 | Stakeholders are notified of significant AI risks or incidents |
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- **Suggested Actions:**
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- - Implement an AI incident log with severity classification (low/medium/high/critical)
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- - Define notification thresholds: internal escalation, external customer notification, regulatory disclosure
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- - Conduct post-incident reviews and update the risk register and GOVERN policies
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- - Share anonymized incident learnings with industry where appropriate (e.g., AI incident databases)
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-
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- ### MG-4: Risk Treatment Reviewed and Improved
348
-
349
- **Purpose:** Close the loop — feed treatment outcomes back into GOVERN and MAP for continuous improvement.
350
-
351
- | Subcategory | Description |
352
- |-------------|-------------|
353
- | MG-4.1 | AI risk management processes are periodically reviewed for effectiveness |
354
- | MG-4.2 | Improvements to AI risk management are identified and implemented |
355
- | MG-4.3 | Lessons learned inform updates to organizational AI risk policies |
356
- | MG-4.4 | The organization's AI risk profile is reviewed when significant changes occur |
357
-
358
- **Suggested Actions:**
359
- - Schedule quarterly AI risk programme reviews covering all four functions
360
- - Use external assessment or third-party audit every 1–2 years to validate programme effectiveness
361
- - Update GOVERN policies and MAP context documents following every major incident or model update
1
+ # NIST AI RMF 1.0 — Full Category and Subcategory Reference
2
+
3
+ Source: NIST AI 100-1 (January 2023) and the AI RMF Playbook (NIST AI 100-1 Playbook)
4
+
5
+ ---
6
+
7
+ ## GOVERN Function (6 Categories, 21 Subcategories)
8
+
9
+ GOVERN establishes the organizational culture, policies, accountability, and risk tolerance that underpin all other functions. It should be addressed first and revisited continuously.
10
+
11
+ ### GV-1: Policies, Processes, Procedures and Practices in Place
12
+
13
+ **Purpose:** Ensure the organization has formalized policies and processes for AI risk management across the full AI lifecycle.
14
+
15
+ | Subcategory | Description |
16
+ |-------------|-------------|
17
+ | GV-1.1 | AI risk management is integrated into the organization's broader enterprise risk management (ERM) processes |
18
+ | GV-1.2 | The characteristics of trustworthy AI are integrated into organizational policies, processes, and practices |
19
+ | GV-1.3 | Organizational risk tolerance for AI is established, communicated, and reflected in AI policies |
20
+ | GV-1.4 | Organizational teams are committed to a culture of risk awareness and continuous improvement |
21
+ | GV-1.5 | Organizational policies for AI risk management are reviewed and updated on a periodic cadence |
22
+ | GV-1.6 | Policies for complying with applicable AI laws, regulations, and standards are established |
23
+ | GV-1.7 | Processes for regular review of AI risk policies to incorporate emerging AI risks are established |
24
+
25
+ **Suggested Actions:**
26
+ - Publish an organization-wide AI Risk Management Policy signed by senior leadership
27
+ - Define AI risk appetite statements (e.g., acceptable false positive rates, bias thresholds)
28
+ - Incorporate AI risk into existing ERM committee agendas and quarterly reviews
29
+ - Establish a policy review cycle (minimum annual) with a designated AI risk owner
30
+
31
+ ---
32
+
33
+ ### GV-2: Accountability Structures
34
+
35
+ **Purpose:** Assign clear ownership of AI risk management decisions at the organizational level.
36
+
37
+ | Subcategory | Description |
38
+ |-------------|-------------|
39
+ | GV-2.1 | Roles and responsibilities for AI risk management across organizational levels are documented |
40
+ | GV-2.2 | The organization designates senior officials accountable for AI risk outcomes |
41
+ | GV-2.3 | Executive leadership understands AI risk and fosters an accountable culture |
42
+
43
+ **Suggested Actions:**
44
+ - Appoint an AI Risk Owner or Chief AI Officer with board-level reporting
45
+ - Define RACI for AI development, deployment, and monitoring decisions
46
+ - Include AI risk in executive performance goals and leadership dashboards
47
+
48
+ ---
49
+
50
+ ### GV-3: Roles and Responsibilities
51
+
52
+ **Purpose:** Identify and define all roles involved in AI design, development, deployment, and evaluation.
53
+
54
+ | Subcategory | Description |
55
+ |-------------|-------------|
56
+ | GV-3.1 | AI risk management roles span the entire AI lifecycle from design through decommission |
57
+ | GV-3.2 | AI risk responsibilities are defined for development teams, operators, and deployers |
58
+ | GV-3.3 | Responsibilities for AI risk are assigned to both technical and non-technical roles |
59
+
60
+ **Suggested Actions:**
61
+ - Create an AI roles register mapping each lifecycle stage to responsible team/individual
62
+ - Ensure business owners (not just engineers) are accountable for deployed AI outcomes
63
+ - Define responsibilities for external AI vendors and third-party model providers
64
+
65
+ ---
66
+
67
+ ### GV-4: Cross-Functional Team Collaboration
68
+
69
+ **Purpose:** Ensure AI risk management involves diverse perspectives across the organization.
70
+
71
+ | Subcategory | Description |
72
+ |-------------|-------------|
73
+ | GV-4.1 | Cross-functional AI risk teams include AI/ML, legal, privacy, security, HR, and ethics functions |
74
+ | GV-4.2 | Processes for communicating AI risks between teams are documented |
75
+ | GV-4.3 | Mechanisms for escalating AI risk concerns are established |
76
+
77
+ **Suggested Actions:**
78
+ - Establish an AI Risk Working Group with quarterly cross-functional reviews
79
+ - Create an AI risk escalation path from development teams to executive leadership
80
+ - Include privacy, legal, and security representatives in AI system design reviews
81
+
82
+ ---
83
+
84
+ ### GV-5: Organizational Risk Tolerance for AI
85
+
86
+ **Purpose:** Communicate AI risk tolerance and link it to operational decisions.
87
+
88
+ | Subcategory | Description |
89
+ |-------------|-------------|
90
+ | GV-5.1 | AI risk tolerance is defined and reflects organizational values |
91
+ | GV-5.2 | AI risk tolerance is reviewed when new AI systems are deployed or contexts change |
92
+ | GV-5.3 | Risk tolerance statements inform go/no-go decisions for AI system deployment |
93
+
94
+ **Suggested Actions:**
95
+ - Define risk tolerance per AI system category (e.g., low-stakes recommendations vs. high-stakes decisions affecting individuals)
96
+ - Create a deployment checklist that validates an AI system against stated risk tolerance before launch
97
+ - Link risk tolerance to specific bias and accuracy thresholds in testing requirements
98
+
99
+ ---
100
+
101
+ ### GV-6: AI Risk Aligned to Laws, Regulations, and Principles
102
+
103
+ **Purpose:** Ensure AI risks and risk management practices align with applicable laws, ethical principles, and industry standards.
104
+
105
+ | Subcategory | Description |
106
+ |-------------|-------------|
107
+ | GV-6.1 | Legal and regulatory requirements for AI are identified and tracked |
108
+ | GV-6.2 | AI risk management processes are aligned with applicable ethical principles |
109
+ | GV-6.3 | The organization engages with emerging AI regulations on a proactive basis |
110
+
111
+ **Suggested Actions:**
112
+ - Maintain a regulatory register for applicable AI laws (EU AI Act, state AI laws, sector-specific requirements)
113
+ - Align AI risk policies to NIST AI 100-1, ISO/IEC 42001, and relevant sector frameworks (FINRA, HIPAA, etc.)
114
+ - Designate a legal/compliance representative on the AI governance committee
115
+
116
+ ---
117
+
118
+ ## MAP Function (5 Categories, 20 Subcategories)
119
+
120
+ MAP establishes context before risks are measured or managed. A well-executed MAP prevents investing resources in the wrong risk treatments.
121
+
122
+ ### MP-1: Context Is Established
123
+
124
+ **Purpose:** Understand the intended use, operating environment, and affected populations of each AI system.
125
+
126
+ | Subcategory | Description |
127
+ |-------------|-------------|
128
+ | MP-1.1 | The organization's mission and goals related to AI are documented |
129
+ | MP-1.2 | Intended uses of the AI system are documented and bounded |
130
+ | MP-1.3 | The AI system's operating environment and constraints are defined |
131
+ | MP-1.4 | Affected individuals, groups, communities, and organizations are identified |
132
+ | MP-1.5 | Potential harms, misuses, and unintended uses are scoped |
133
+ | MP-1.6 | Legal, regulatory, and contractual constraints are identified |
134
+
135
+ **Suggested Actions:**
136
+ - Produce an AI System Description Document for each deployed system covering: purpose, inputs, outputs, decision authority, operator vs. user roles
137
+ - Identify affected populations at the beginning of design — not at deployment
138
+ - Document prohibited use cases explicitly
139
+
140
+ ---
141
+
142
+ ### MP-2: Scientific Understanding Applied
143
+
144
+ **Purpose:** Apply current scientific understanding of AI capabilities and limitations to the design and risk assessment.
145
+
146
+ | Subcategory | Description |
147
+ |-------------|-------------|
148
+ | MP-2.1 | AI and ML capabilities and limitations are documented for the specific system type |
149
+ | MP-2.2 | Assumptions and constraints of the AI system's training data are documented |
150
+ | MP-2.3 | Uncertainty and variability in AI outputs are characterized |
151
+
152
+ **Suggested Actions:**
153
+ - Document model card or system card information including training data sources, known biases, and performance bounds
154
+ - Quantify output uncertainty (confidence intervals, calibration metrics) where applicable
155
+ - Review relevant literature on known failure modes for the model architecture in use
156
+
157
+ ---
158
+
159
+ ### MP-3: Risks and Benefits Mapped to Stakeholders
160
+
161
+ **Purpose:** Identify who benefits from the AI system and who bears its risks — these are often different groups.
162
+
163
+ | Subcategory | Description |
164
+ |-------------|-------------|
165
+ | MP-3.1 | Benefits and risks are documented for each identified stakeholder group |
166
+ | MP-3.2 | Affected communities are engaged where feasible to understand perceived risks and benefits |
167
+ | MP-3.3 | The distribution of benefits vs. risks across stakeholder groups is evaluated |
168
+ | MP-3.4 | Feedback mechanisms for affected individuals to report harm are established |
169
+
170
+ **Suggested Actions:**
171
+ - Create a stakeholder risk/benefit matrix: rows = stakeholder group, columns = risk type, benefit type
172
+ - Implement a feedback channel (e.g., complaint form, audit log review) for users to report unexpected outcomes
173
+ - Conduct equity analysis: which groups are disproportionately affected by errors?
174
+
175
+ ---
176
+
177
+ ### MP-4: Risks Prioritized
178
+
179
+ **Purpose:** Prioritize identified risks to focus MEASURE and MANAGE resources effectively.
180
+
181
+ | Subcategory | Description |
182
+ |-------------|-------------|
183
+ | MP-4.1 | Risk prioritization criteria are established (e.g., severity, breadth, reversibility) |
184
+ | MP-4.2 | Risks are ranked and documented in the AI risk register |
185
+ | MP-4.3 | Highest-priority risks are escalated to GOVERN for risk tolerance review |
186
+
187
+ **Suggested Actions:**
188
+ - Use a severity × breadth × reversibility scoring model for prioritization
189
+ - Flag any risk that affects a protected class, creates legal exposure, or is irreversible as high-priority
190
+ - Review prioritization at each model version update or significant context change
191
+
192
+ ---
193
+
194
+ ### MP-5: Likelihood and Impact Characterized
195
+
196
+ **Purpose:** Characterize the probability and potential severity of identified harms.
197
+
198
+ | Subcategory | Description |
199
+ |-------------|-------------|
200
+ | MP-5.1 | Likelihood of harm is estimated using historical data, expert judgment, or red-teaming |
201
+ | MP-5.2 | Potential impact is assessed across physical, psychological, financial, and reputational dimensions |
202
+ | MP-5.3 | Cumulative and systemic risks (e.g., societal effects of widespread deployment) are considered |
203
+
204
+ **Suggested Actions:**
205
+ - Conduct red-team exercises and adversarial testing to estimate real-world failure rates
206
+ - Assess impact across harm dimensions: physical safety, financial, psychological, reputational, societal
207
+ - For large-scale deployments, model aggregate societal effects (e.g., labour market impact of an automated hiring tool)
208
+
209
+ ---
210
+
211
+ ## MEASURE Function (4 Categories, 16 Subcategories)
212
+
213
+ MEASURE employs quantitative and qualitative tools to evaluate AI risks identified in MAP.
214
+
215
+ ### MS-1: Measurement Approaches Identified
216
+
217
+ **Purpose:** Identify appropriate methods and tools for measuring AI risks.
218
+
219
+ | Subcategory | Description |
220
+ |-------------|-------------|
221
+ | MS-1.1 | Metrics for each identified risk are defined (technical, operational, and societal) |
222
+ | MS-1.2 | Measurement approaches are appropriate for the AI system type and deployment context |
223
+ | MS-1.3 | Gaps in measurement capabilities are documented and addressed |
224
+
225
+ **Suggested Actions:**
226
+ - Define metrics for each trustworthiness property: accuracy, fairness (demographic parity, equalized odds), robustness (adversarial accuracy), explainability (LIME/SHAP scores), privacy (differential privacy ε)
227
+ - Document measurement tools and their known limitations
228
+ - Identify where human evaluation is required instead of (or in addition to) automated metrics
229
+
230
+ ---
231
+
232
+ ### MS-2: AI Systems Evaluated for Trustworthiness
233
+
234
+ **Purpose:** Evaluate AI systems against the trustworthiness properties throughout the lifecycle.
235
+
236
+ | Subcategory | Description |
237
+ |-------------|-------------|
238
+ | MS-2.1 | AI systems are evaluated pre-deployment for technical performance and safety |
239
+ | MS-2.2 | Bias and fairness testing is conducted across demographic groups |
240
+ | MS-2.3 | Explainability and interpretability requirements are tested and documented |
241
+ | MS-2.4 | Security and privacy of the AI system are assessed |
242
+ | MS-2.5 | Human oversight mechanisms are tested and validated |
243
+ | MS-2.6 | Evaluation results are documented and shared with relevant stakeholders |
244
+
245
+ **Suggested Actions:**
246
+ - Require pre-deployment evaluation report covering all seven trustworthiness properties
247
+ - Run disaggregated performance testing across demographic subgroups (age, gender, race, geography)
248
+ - Test adversarial robustness using standard benchmark datasets relevant to the model type
249
+ - Document SHAP/LIME explanations for models affecting high-stakes individual decisions
250
+
251
+ ---
252
+
253
+ ### MS-3: AI Risk Tracked Over Time
254
+
255
+ **Purpose:** Monitor AI risk continuously after deployment to detect drift, degradation, or new harms.
256
+
257
+ | Subcategory | Description |
258
+ |-------------|-------------|
259
+ | MS-3.1 | Ongoing monitoring metrics are defined and implemented post-deployment |
260
+ | MS-3.2 | Model drift and performance degradation are detected and trigger review |
261
+ | MS-3.3 | New risks identified post-deployment are fed back into MAP |
262
+ | MS-3.4 | External signals (regulatory updates, academic findings, media reports) inform monitoring |
263
+
264
+ **Suggested Actions:**
265
+ - Implement model monitoring dashboards tracking accuracy, fairness metrics, and input data distribution
266
+ - Set alert thresholds that trigger human review (e.g., accuracy drops >5%, demographic parity gap exceeds threshold)
267
+ - Assign a model owner responsible for monthly monitoring reviews
268
+ - Subscribe to NIST NVD and relevant AI safety/bias research feeds
269
+
270
+ ---
271
+
272
+ ### MS-4: Feedback Informs MANAGE
273
+
274
+ **Purpose:** Ensure measurement results directly inform risk treatment decisions in MANAGE.
275
+
276
+ | Subcategory | Description |
277
+ |-------------|-------------|
278
+ | MS-4.1 | Measurement outputs are communicated to decision-makers responsible for MANAGE |
279
+ | MS-4.2 | Measurement limitations and uncertainties are communicated alongside results |
280
+ | MS-4.3 | Measurement results are used to update the AI risk register and treatment plans |
281
+
282
+ **Suggested Actions:**
283
+ - Create a measurement-to-action protocol: define which measurement findings trigger which MANAGE actions
284
+ - Include measurement uncertainty caveats in all AI risk reports
285
+ - Automate risk register updates from monitoring dashboards where feasible
286
+
287
+ ---
288
+
289
+ ## MANAGE Function (4 Categories, 18 Subcategories)
290
+
291
+ MANAGE addresses identified AI risks through treatment, monitoring, and improvement.
292
+
293
+ ### MG-1: Risks Prioritized and Documented
294
+
295
+ **Purpose:** Ensure the most impactful AI risks receive treatment resources first.
296
+
297
+ | Subcategory | Description |
298
+ |-------------|-------------|
299
+ | MG-1.1 | AI risk register entries are prioritized and assigned treatment owners |
300
+ | MG-1.2 | Risk prioritization reflects organizational risk tolerance (GOVERN 1.3) |
301
+ | MG-1.3 | Residual risks after treatment are documented and accepted by appropriate authority |
302
+
303
+ **Suggested Actions:**
304
+ - Assign a treatment owner, target date, and treatment approach for every risk register entry
305
+ - Require senior approval for accepting residual risks above the defined risk tolerance threshold
306
+ - Review residual risk acceptance annually or when significant system changes occur
307
+
308
+ ---
309
+
310
+ ### MG-2: Strategies Planned and Actioned
311
+
312
+ **Purpose:** Develop and execute risk treatment strategies that reduce AI risk to acceptable levels.
313
+
314
+ | Subcategory | Description |
315
+ |-------------|-------------|
316
+ | MG-2.1 | Risk treatment options are identified (mitigate, transfer, avoid, accept) |
317
+ | MG-2.2 | Treatment strategies are resourced and implemented |
318
+ | MG-2.3 | Emergency interventions (e.g., system shutdown) are defined for critical failures |
319
+ | MG-2.4 | Benefits of AI systems are preserved while reducing risks |
320
+
321
+ **Suggested Actions:**
322
+ - For each high-priority risk, identify one or more treatment options: technical (retrain, constrain, add human review), operational (restrict use case), contractual (indemnification), or avoidance (decommission)
323
+ - Define a "kill switch" or emergency shutdown procedure for AI systems affecting safety
324
+ - Document benefit-risk tradeoffs for any accepted risk
325
+
326
+ ---
327
+
328
+ ### MG-3: Risk Responses Monitored and Adjusted
329
+
330
+ **Purpose:** Ensure risk treatments remain effective over time and adapt to changing conditions.
331
+
332
+ | Subcategory | Description |
333
+ |-------------|-------------|
334
+ | MG-3.1 | Effectiveness of risk treatments is monitored using defined metrics |
335
+ | MG-3.2 | AI incidents are documented, reported, and investigated |
336
+ | MG-3.3 | Lessons learned from incidents are applied to future risk management |
337
+ | MG-3.4 | Stakeholders are notified of significant AI risks or incidents |
338
+
339
+ **Suggested Actions:**
340
+ - Implement an AI incident log with severity classification (low/medium/high/critical)
341
+ - Define notification thresholds: internal escalation, external customer notification, regulatory disclosure
342
+ - Conduct post-incident reviews and update the risk register and GOVERN policies
343
+ - Share anonymized incident learnings with industry where appropriate (e.g., AI incident databases)
344
+
345
+ ---
346
+
347
+ ### MG-4: Risk Treatment Reviewed and Improved
348
+
349
+ **Purpose:** Close the loop — feed treatment outcomes back into GOVERN and MAP for continuous improvement.
350
+
351
+ | Subcategory | Description |
352
+ |-------------|-------------|
353
+ | MG-4.1 | AI risk management processes are periodically reviewed for effectiveness |
354
+ | MG-4.2 | Improvements to AI risk management are identified and implemented |
355
+ | MG-4.3 | Lessons learned inform updates to organizational AI risk policies |
356
+ | MG-4.4 | The organization's AI risk profile is reviewed when significant changes occur |
357
+
358
+ **Suggested Actions:**
359
+ - Schedule quarterly AI risk programme reviews covering all four functions
360
+ - Use external assessment or third-party audit every 1–2 years to validate programme effectiveness
361
+ - Update GOVERN policies and MAP context documents following every major incident or model update