Regulatory Radar

Filter the Federal Register for cybersecurity, FedRAMP, CMMC, AI, and IT-services rules in motion. Read the regulation that's about to land before your competitors do.

Examples: FedRAMP · CMMC 2.0 · artificial intelligence · cyber incident reporting

Type

Why this exists

Regulation moves slow until it doesn't. CMMC 2.0 took years to draft and was suddenly mandatory. CIRCIA incident-reporting rules surprised half the MSP market. The companies that read the proposed rule and submitted comments at the comment-period stage shaped the final language; the ones who waited for the final rule had to scramble.

The Federal Register is where every U.S. federal rule lives — proposed, final, and notice. This page filters it for the keywords your audience cares about, with a direct link to the full document and to the comment period (when one is open).

Frequently asked questions

What does Regulatory Radar surface?

Active and recently-published rules in the Federal Register matching a keyword filter — covering proposed rules, final rules, notices, and presidential documents. Useful for tracking cybersecurity, FedRAMP, CMMC, IT services, AI policy, and other policy areas where federal regulation is in motion.

How current is the data?

The Federal Register publishes daily; this tool queries the official federalregister.gov API in real-time. Comment periods, effective dates, and CFR citations are all populated where available.

Why track this proactively?

Federal rules become final on a published timeline. Reading a proposed rule during its comment period gives you 30-60 days of advance notice on what's coming and a public mechanism to influence it. Reading a final rule the day it's published is a competitive-advantage signal.