As Donald Trump offers federal employees massive buyouts in a bid to axe as many as possible, OpenAI is conveniently offering a new AI tool to replace that workload. In a new blog post, OpenAI announced the launch of ChatGPT Gov, a “tailored version” of the company’s groundbreaking chatbot with additional security layers for the processing of sensitive government information. Unveiled just a week after Trump’s $500 billion Stargate AI deal that includes OpenAI — and right before his administration offered government employees “deferred resignation” in exchange for months of pay and benefits — this new version of ChatGPT will, as CNBC reports, operate similarly to the enterprise version that underpins it. In a call with reporters, OpenAI chief product officer Kevin Weil insisted that agencies will be able to input “non-public, sensitive information” into ChatGPT Gov — even though ChatGPT Enterprise has not finished the “long process” of getting federal accreditation for such usage. Despite that shaky foundation, the company told FedScoop that it’s already in conversation with “several” unnamed agencies who want to use ChatGPT Gov — an alarming prospect in terms of national security, though to be fair, Trump’s human “First Buddy” also lacks the level of security clearance needed for the work he does as well. With OpenAI announcing ChatGPT just before news broke about Trump’s “deferred resignation” scheme, folks online smelled something fishy. “Just happen to announce this the same day they invite all federal employees to quit,” Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, a particle physicist at the University of New Hampshire, posted on…As Trump Offers Buyout to Get Rid of as Many Government Workers as Possible, OpenAI Announces New Version of ChatGPT Designed to Do Government Work