50 U.S.C. § 3242
Verified against govinfo.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on govinfo.gov ↗
- (a)On an annual basis through 2026, the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Director of the National Security Agency, in coordination with the Director of National Intelligence, shall jointly submit to the congressional intelligence committees a report containing information on foreign commercial providers and the cyber vulnerabilities procured by the intelligence community through foreign commercial providers.
- (b)Each report under subsection (a) shall include, with respect to the period covered by the report, the following:
- (1)A description of each cyber vulnerability procured through a foreign commercial provider, including—
- (A)a description of the vulnerability;
- (B)the date of the procurement;
- (C)whether the procurement consisted of only that vulnerability or included other vulnerabilities;
- (D)the cost of the procurement;
- (E)the identity of the commercial provider and, if the commercial provider was not the original supplier of the vulnerability, a description of the original supplier;
- (F)the country of origin of the vulnerability; and
- (G)an assessment of the ability of the intelligence community to use the vulnerability, including whether such use will be operational or for research and development, and the approximate timeline for such use.
- (2)An assessment of foreign commercial providers that—
- (3)An assessment of whether the intelligence community has conducted business with the foreign commercial providers identified under paragraph (2) during the 5-year period preceding the date of the report.
- (1)A description of each cyber vulnerability procured through a foreign commercial provider, including—
- (c)Each report under subsection (a) may be submitted in classified form.
- (d)In this section:
- (1)The term “commercial provider” means any person that sells, or acts as a broker, for a cyber vulnerability.
- (2)The term “cyber vulnerability” means any tool, exploit, vulnerability, or code that is intended to compromise a device, network, or system, including such a tool, exploit, vulnerability, or code procured by the intelligence community for purposes of research and development.