Updated
Updated · Ars Technica · Jun 30
Trump's 27,000-Site AI Overhaul Stalls as Agency Cuts Fuel Backlash
Updated
Updated · Ars Technica · Jun 30

Trump's 27,000-Site AI Overhaul Stalls as Agency Cuts Fuel Backlash

1 articles · Updated · Ars Technica · Jun 30

Summary

  • A year into the National Design Studio, Trump’s three-year push to remake 27,000 .gov websites with AI has produced few launches and growing resistance from agencies.
  • Deep cuts to the teams that previously handled federal web modernization undercut the effort: 18F was dismantled, the US Digital Service was reshaped into DOGE, and the USWDS team was cut to one full-time employee.
  • Design experts say the project leans too heavily on AI and has not adequately tested sites for Americans with Disabilities Act compliance, prompting scrutiny over what critics call “AI-designed horrors.”
  • Only 30% of government websites used USWDS standards by mid-2023, underscoring how hard adoption already was before NDS tried to impose a faster overhaul with a smaller team.

Insights

As AI fails to guarantee digital accessibility, how will the government meet its fast-approaching disability compliance deadlines for thousands of websites?
Can a secretive studio succeed in overhauling government websites after experienced federal tech teams were dismantled?
How is sensitive citizen data from duplicate government websites being protected from misuse by a studio that bypasses normal oversight?