US feds are actively hiring "person who decides which models to ban"(usajobs.gov)
usajobs.gov
US feds are actively hiring "person who decides which models to ban"
https://www.usajobs.gov/job/856265200
29 comments
Headline is absolute clickbait: please don't use quotation marks when you just make things up.
"This job announcement has closed", that was fast.
The dates show that it was open for 20 days back in February.
A lot of times they create job posting for someone they already want to fill a certain role.
NIST is in effect a branch of the NSA, although not literally, only in effect. If the NSA says jump, it'll ask how high. If the NSA say "ban this model because our adversaries will use it to patch their systems", NIST will say yes sir.
I guess we'll all be transitioning to open models soon enough.
I guess we'll all be transitioning to open models soon enough.
I wonder how much it costs to have the government declare your model to be too good to be allowed.
Closed date: 02/23/2026
That pay scale seems insulting
Government pay often is. The pay scales are capped, with a few exceptions and ways around things, so unless this job goes up to an SES or similar grade that $197k is the best they can do.
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries... - All pay scales
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries... - DC area, so base + locality.
Note that at the top the GS-15 steps 6-10 all get the same pay. The linked position's listed pay range spans GS-13 through GS-15, which is actually a huge spread and kind of funny. That's a large spread in responsibility between GS-13 and GS-15. In civil service, as a manager a GS-13 might be responsible for on the order of 50-100 people and millions in contracts and equipment, a GS-15 might be responsible for thousands of people and billions in contracts and equipment (location does matter a bit, the folks in DC, because the cost of living is so much higher, usually end up with some grade inflation so drop them 1-2 grades to compare to the rest of the US).
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries... - All pay scales
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries... - DC area, so base + locality.
Note that at the top the GS-15 steps 6-10 all get the same pay. The linked position's listed pay range spans GS-13 through GS-15, which is actually a huge spread and kind of funny. That's a large spread in responsibility between GS-13 and GS-15. In civil service, as a manager a GS-13 might be responsible for on the order of 50-100 people and millions in contracts and equipment, a GS-15 might be responsible for thousands of people and billions in contracts and equipment (location does matter a bit, the folks in DC, because the cost of living is so much higher, usually end up with some grade inflation so drop them 1-2 grades to compare to the rest of the US).
Isn’t that average or even high for a tech role? I’m in ny making less than that scale
Not even in the right ballpark.
Firstly, a job of this level should be executive scale pay.
Secondly, on site should include a 30% boost above remote. It costs you money and time to commute, and thats part of total compensation.
Firstly, a job of this level should be executive scale pay.
Secondly, on site should include a 30% boost above remote. It costs you money and time to commute, and thats part of total compensation.
Are you making less than 130k total comp in NYC while doing AI stuff as an engineer?
I'd highly recommend looking for a new job.
I'd highly recommend looking for a new job.
Goverment does not pay as much as private sector, and pay is all based on years of experience, not talent.
> pay is all based on years of experience, not talent.
That's true for GS and WG positions (though they can get performance based bonus step increases, these are relatively rare unless you play golf with the boss), but the pay bands mostly try to get around that and give performance-based raises. Supervisors don't like getting taken to EEO so they often won't give low scores even to people who deserve them, though. This results in the top performers usually getting bigger raises than low performers, but low and middling performers end up with roughly equivalent raises.
In theory, most of the pay band systems offer an effective way to weed out poor performers, but it's just not used.
That's true for GS and WG positions (though they can get performance based bonus step increases, these are relatively rare unless you play golf with the boss), but the pay bands mostly try to get around that and give performance-based raises. Supervisors don't like getting taken to EEO so they often won't give low scores even to people who deserve them, though. This results in the top performers usually getting bigger raises than low performers, but low and middling performers end up with roughly equivalent raises.
In theory, most of the pay band systems offer an effective way to weed out poor performers, but it's just not used.
govt jobs are about the benefits and security. lifetime of healthcare, retirement, and job security. i know a ton of people who refuse to work in private sector after going into govt work cuz it's so much more stable.
it's worth it.
it's worth it.
I'm sure that position comes with plenty of back-channel incentives.
$150k for a 13 month contract is "anyone with a pulse" money.
Nobody who is actually qualified would take it, unless they're on the grift.
Nobody who is actually qualified would take it, unless they're on the grift.
I guess I wasn't clear. Being an individual who sets policy on which models can be made available is worth many millions even if it was formally a volunteer position.
This has got to be hands down the wildest take I've ever seen on this site.
You really think fully qualified high level AI engineers anywhere in this US, let alone in a major metro, are pulling in $150k with no stock or bonus?
They would just leave and pursue one of the many open positions paying double that for fully remote work that also typically include RSU's, bonuses, or options.
I know project managers that make twice that in smaller cities, just because they're AI adjacent.
They would just leave and pursue one of the many open positions paying double that for fully remote work that also typically include RSU's, bonuses, or options.
I know project managers that make twice that in smaller cities, just because they're AI adjacent.
> You really think fully qualified high level AI engineers anywhere in this US, let alone in a major metro, are pulling in $150k with no stock or bonus?
No. You're completely missing the point.
If they paid competitively then candidates would be competing against qualified engineers.
Regardless of qualification, it's a valuable position, because of the responsibility and capability of setting policy. You don't need any qualification for that. It probably helps not to have it. And that's value that can be turned into other forms of compensation, perhaps using fancy accounting.
No. You're completely missing the point.
If they paid competitively then candidates would be competing against qualified engineers.
Regardless of qualification, it's a valuable position, because of the responsibility and capability of setting policy. You don't need any qualification for that. It probably helps not to have it. And that's value that can be turned into other forms of compensation, perhaps using fancy accounting.
I think we agree here. Something is rotten with this role.
Thats why I said "unless they're on the grift". "Grift" is slang that means something like scam or confidence game (the origin of the term 'con').
Thats why I said "unless they're on the grift". "Grift" is slang that means something like scam or confidence game (the origin of the term 'con').
ai models are clearly a threat to the world order
The meritocracy strikes again.
I’m sure they’ll make the right hiring decision, right?