A DOGE AI tool called Sweetrex is reducing US government regulations
Attempt to the intestine Regulations are being fulfilled throughout the US government using artificial intelligence.
On Wednesday, the Office of Information at the Host Office of Management and Budget was a video call to discuss artificial intelligence tools for disconnecting federal regulations, called Sweetrex AI AI. This tool, which is still under development, is built to identify parts of the Regulations required by the Statute, then accelerate the process of updating the regulations.
Development and progress of what is officially called the AI Sweetrex Planning Manufacturer, or Sweetrex Daip, in order to achieve the goals set in “Boosting Boom through Donald Trump’s deregulation”, which aims to promote cautious financial management and reduce illegal reduction. “Industrial Scale Regulations are a major goal presented in the 2025 project, a document served as a game book for Trump’s second government. The so -called government efficiency (DOGE) has also estimated that” 50 % of the total federal regulations can be eliminated “, according to July 1, 2025, PowerPoint.
For this purpose, Sweetrex was built by DOGE colleagues working outside the Housing and Urban Development Group (HUD). The plan is to move it to other US agencies. Members of the call included employees across the government, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Foreign Ministry and the Federal Deposit Insurance Company.
Dog -affiliated Christopher Shirin, initially introduced as a “special assistant” with colleagues and until recently a third -year student at the University of Chicago, led the call and was recognized as the main developer of Sweetrex (thus its name). He told colleagues that tools of Anthropic and Openai are increasingly used by federal workers, and “many increased productivity of the tools made around these operating systems is achieved.” Shirin said that for Sweetrex, they “use the Google family primarily, so gemini first.”
Neither sweet nor Oomb immediately responded to the Wired request for comment. The HUD press office just replied that the request was “reviewing”. Google has not yet responded to a comment.
Previously, Wired has been reported about the output of an AI tool for deregulation in HUD. A spreadsheet in detail how many words can be removed from individual regulations and a percentage shows how the regulations are not compatible. How this percentage was calculated was unknown. At that time, Shirin did not respond to the request, and a spokesman for the HUD said that the agency would not comment on personal staff.
The leader in contact with Wednesday along with Shirin, Scott Langmac, a senior DOGE consultant in HUD, and according to LinkedIn, COO from Kukun technology. (Wired reported that he has access to the level of the program to important HUD systems; Coconut is a Proptech company that, according to his website, “on a long -term mission to collect the hardest data.” He claimed, for example, that the tool was able to reduce the time spent to review and propose edited regulations from months to hours or days.