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Anthropic Introduces Memory Import Tool for Claude, Enabling Seamless Switch from Other AI Chatbots

Anthropic Introduces Memory Import Tool for Claude, Enabling Seamless Switch from Other AI Chatbots
Anthropic has launched a new memory import feature for its Claude AI chatbot that lets users transfer conversation context from competing chatbots such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot. By extracting memories into a text prompt and feeding them into Claude, the system can assimilate the information within roughly 24 hours. Users can view and adjust what Claude remembers through the app’s settings, with a focus on work‑related topics. The rollout comes as Claude recently surged to the top of the free App Store charts, overtaking ChatGPT after Anthropic’s stance on Department of Defense AI guardrails sparked user interest and controversy.Weiterlesen

U.S. Government Blacklists Anthropic After Pentagon Contract Refusal

U.S. Government Blacklists Anthropic After Pentagon Contract Refusal
The Trump administration halted all federal use of Anthropic's artificial‑intelligence technology after the company declined to allow its tools to be used for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth invoked a national‑security law to blacklist Anthropic, jeopardizing a contract worth up to $200 million and potentially barring the firm from future defense work. The move has sparked debate over AI safety commitments, industry self‑regulation, and the need for binding government oversight.Weiterlesen

Anthropic’s Claude Climbs to No. 2 in Apple’s U.S. App Store Amid Pentagon Dispute

Anthropic’s Claude Climbs to No. 2 in Apple’s U.S. App Store Amid Pentagon Dispute
Anthropic’s chatbot Claude has risen to the second spot among free apps in Apple’s U.S. App Store, trailing only OpenAI’s ChatGPT and ahead of Google’s Gemini. The surge follows a high‑profile clash with the Pentagon, where Anthropic sought safeguards against the Department of Defense using its models for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to cease using Anthropic products, and the Defense Secretary labeled the company a supply‑chain threat. OpenAI later announced its own agreement with the Pentagon that includes similar safeguards.Weiterlesen

Trump Moves to Ban Anthropic from the US Government

Trump Moves to Ban Anthropic from the US Government
A dispute between the Department of Defense and AI company Anthropic has intensified, with officials exchanging criticisms publicly. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and gave the firm a deadline to revise its contract to permit “all lawful use” of its models. Experts suggest the conflict stems more from differing attitudes than concrete policy disagreements, noting that Anthropic has so far supported the Pentagon’s proposed uses. The company, founded on AI safety principles, has warned about the risks of fully autonomous weapons while acknowledging their potential defensive value.Weiterlesen

OpenAI Secures Deal with U.S. Defense Department to Deploy Its AI Models

OpenAI Secures Deal with U.S. Defense Department to Deploy Its AI Models
OpenAI announced a contract with the U.S. Defense Department to place its artificial‑intelligence models within the agency’s network. The agreement includes two core safety principles—prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and a requirement for human responsibility over the use of force, including autonomous weapon systems. OpenAI will provide technical safeguards, assign engineers to work with the department, and run the models on cloud infrastructure, with a pending partnership to use Amazon Web Services for enterprise customers. The deal comes as rival Anthropic declined a similar government offer, citing concerns over surveillance and weaponization.Weiterlesen

Pentagon Labels Anthropic a Supply‑Chain Risk, Sparking Industry Backlash

Pentagon Labels Anthropic a Supply‑Chain Risk, Sparking Industry Backlash
The U.S. secretary of defense announced that Anthropic, a leading AI startup, is now designated as a supply‑chain risk for any contractor, supplier, or partner doing business with the military. The move has sent shockwaves through the tech sector, prompting Anthropic to vow legal action and raising concerns about the impact on existing defense contracts and broader AI collaborations. Industry leaders, legal experts, and policy analysts are debating the legality and potential precedent of the designation, while companies that work with both the Pentagon and Anthropic are left uncertain about their future relationships.Weiterlesen

OpenAI Terminates Employee Over Use of Confidential Data on Prediction Markets

OpenAI Terminates Employee Over Use of Confidential Data on Prediction Markets
OpenAI has dismissed an unnamed employee after discovering that the worker used confidential company information to trade on prediction market platforms such as Polymarket. The company said the conduct violated its internal policy that bars the use of inside information for personal gain. Prediction markets, which allow users to wager on real‑world outcomes, argue they are financial platforms rather than gambling sites. OpenAI did not provide further comment, and the incident highlights the growing scrutiny of insider activity on emerging financial exchanges.Weiterlesen

OpenAI Reports ChatGPT Surpasses 900 Million Weekly Users and 50 Million Subscribers

OpenAI Reports ChatGPT Surpasses 900 Million Weekly Users and 50 Million Subscribers
OpenAI announced that its chatbot ChatGPT now has more than 900 million weekly active users, up from 700 million earlier. The service also boasts more than 50 million consumer subscribers and a fourfold increase in business subscribers, reaching 9 million. The user base has more than doubled since February 2025, when it had 400 million users. Competitor Anthropic reported a 60% rise in free users and a doubling of paid subscribers. OpenAI also disclosed a scaled‑back investment from Nvidia and new contributions from SoftBank and Amazon.Weiterlesen

Trump Orders Federal Halt to Anthropic’s Claude AI Over Surveillance Concerns

Trump Orders Federal Halt to Anthropic’s Claude AI Over Surveillance Concerns
President Donald Trump instructed U.S. federal agencies to stop using Anthropic's Claude artificial‑intelligence system after the company refused to let the Department of Defense apply the technology for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. The president’s post on Truth Social called Anthropic a "radical left, woke company" and set a six‑month phase‑out for agencies. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said the firm could not in good conscience remove contract clauses that prohibit use of Claude in autonomous weapons or surveillance. The clash highlights growing tension between government demands and AI firms’ safety commitments.Weiterlesen

Trump Orders Federal Agencies to Cease Use of Anthropic AI

Trump Orders Federal Agencies to Cease Use of Anthropic AI
President Trump directed every federal agency to stop using Anthropic's artificial intelligence technology. The order includes a six‑month phase‑out period for agencies such as the Department of Defense. Failure to comply could trigger civil and criminal consequences, according to the president's statement, which frames the move as essential for protecting national security and American lives.Weiterlesen

Musk Criticizes OpenAI’s Safety Record in Deposition, Claims Grok Not Linked to Suicides

Musk Criticizes OpenAI’s Safety Record in Deposition, Claims Grok Not Linked to Suicides
In a newly released deposition related to Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI, the billionaire accused the lab of neglecting safety, contrasting it with his own xAI venture. Musk asserted that no suicides have been linked to his company’s Grok model, while suggesting that OpenAI’s ChatGPT may be implicated. He reiterated his support for the March 2023 AI safety letter and explained his motivation for signing it. The testimony also touched on Musk’s past donation figures, concerns about AI monopolies, and the broader legal battle over OpenAI’s shift from nonprofit to for‑profit status.Weiterlesen

OpenAI Terminates Employee Over Insider Trading on Prediction Markets

OpenAI Terminates Employee Over Insider Trading on Prediction Markets
OpenAI has dismissed an employee after an internal investigation found that the worker used confidential company information to place bets on external prediction market platforms. The company said its policies forbid using internal data for personal gain, and the termination was communicated to staff. The incident highlights growing concerns about insider trading on blockchain‑based prediction markets and has prompted broader industry scrutiny.Weiterlesen

Google and OpenAI Employees Sign Open Letter Supporting Anthropic

Google and OpenAI Employees Sign Open Letter Supporting Anthropic
Hundreds of current employees at Google and OpenAI have added their names to an open letter urging their companies to stand with Anthropic amid a Pentagon dispute over military uses of AI. The letter, titled “We Will Not Be Divided,” calls for both firms to reject Department of War demands for unrestricted model deployment, referencing statements from Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. Over 450 staff members have signed, with the majority from Google and the rest from OpenAI, while roughly half of the participants have chosen anonymity. The move follows recent pressure from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and discussions involving other AI entities such as xAI.Weiterlesen

Anthropic vs. Pentagon: Battle Over AI Use in Defense

Anthropic vs. Pentagon: Battle Over AI Use in Defense
Anthropic's CEO has clashed with the Defense Secretary over the Department of Defense's desire to use the company's AI models for any lawful purpose. Anthropic insists its technology should not be employed for mass surveillance of Americans or fully autonomous weapons without human oversight. The Pentagon argues that vendor restrictions should not limit military operations and has warned of labeling Anthropic a supply‑chain risk if the company does not comply. The dispute highlights a broader struggle over who controls powerful AI systems—private developers or the government.Weiterlesen

ChatGPT Reaches 900 Million Weekly Active Users and Secures $110 Billion in Funding

ChatGPT Reaches 900 Million Weekly Active Users and Secures $110 Billion in Funding
OpenAI announced that its ChatGPT chatbot has climbed to 900 million weekly active users, adding to a base of 50 million paying subscribers. The surge in user engagement coincided with a massive $110 billion private financing round, featuring major commitments from Amazon, Nvidia and SoftBank. The new capital values the company at roughly $730 billion and underscores the rapid momentum of its subscription growth. OpenAI highlighted faster response times, higher reliability and stronger safety as the product scales, positioning ChatGPT as a leading tool for learning, writing, planning and building across a global audience.Weiterlesen

Anthropic CEO Says He’s Unsure If Claude Is Conscious, Raises Questions About AI Model Welfare

Anthropic CEO Says He’s Unsure If Claude Is Conscious, Raises Questions About AI Model Welfare
Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei told a New York Times podcast that the company does not know whether its Claude chatbot is conscious or even what consciousness would mean for a model. He said Anthropic is open to the idea but highlighted uncertainty. The conversation also touched on the company’s recent Constitution for Claude, which frames model welfare and hints at possible moral considerations. Critics view the discussion as marketing hype designed to generate excitement around higher‑priced versions of Claude, while Anthropic’s co‑founder Jack Clark described emergent agentic behavior that appears to give the system a sense of self.Weiterlesen

Perplexity Launches “Perplexity Computer,” an Agentic Tool Uniting 19 AI Models

Perplexity Launches “Perplexity Computer,” an Agentic Tool Uniting 19 AI Models
Perplexity announced the rollout of Perplexity Computer, a cloud‑based agentic system that can orchestrate 19 different AI models to execute complex workflows. The service is currently limited to the company’s $200/month Perplexity Max subscription tier and is positioned for enterprise users making high‑impact decisions. Perplexity Computer can create sub‑agents, select the optimal model for a given task, and deliver results as websites or visualizations. The launch follows a background briefing where a live demo was canceled due to product flaws discovered hours before the event. Perplexity aims to differentiate itself by focusing on multi‑model orchestration and deep‑research capabilities.Weiterlesen

Suno AI Music Generator Reaches 2 Million Subscribers and $300 Million in Annual Revenue

Suno AI Music Generator Reaches 2 Million Subscribers and $300 Million in Annual Revenue
Suno, the AI-powered music creation platform, announced that it now has 2 million paid subscribers and generates $300 million in annual recurring revenue. The growth follows a recent $250 million funding round that valued the company at $2.45 billion. While the service has enabled users with little musical experience to produce chart‑ready tracks, it has also faced copyright lawsuits from musicians and record labels. A settlement with Warner Music Group now allows Suno to use licensed catalog music, and viral user‑generated songs have led to high‑value record deals.Weiterlesen

Anthropic Rejects Pentagon's AI Contract Terms, Citing Ethical Concerns

Anthropic Rejects Pentagon's AI Contract Terms, Citing Ethical Concerns
Anthropic is refusing new Pentagon contract conditions that would relax safeguards on its artificial‑intelligence models. The proposed terms would permit "any lawful use," including mass surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous lethal weapons. Pentagon CTO Emil Michael has suggested labeling Anthropic a "supply chain risk" if it does not comply. While rivals OpenAI and xAI have reportedly accepted the terms, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei says threats do not change the company’s stance, emphasizing that it cannot in good conscience accede to the request.Weiterlesen

Google and OpenAI Employees Back Anthropic Against Pentagon Demand

Google and OpenAI Employees Back Anthropic Against Pentagon Demand
Anthropic faces a standoff with the U.S. Department of War over a request for unrestricted access to its AI technology. As the Pentagon’s deadline looms, more than 300 Google employees and over 60 OpenAI employees have signed an open letter urging their companies to stand with Anthropic and reject the military’s push for use of AI in domestic mass surveillance and fully autonomous weaponry. The letter asks executives at Google and OpenAI to uphold Anthropic’s red lines, while company leaders have not yet issued formal responses. Informal comments suggest sympathy for Anthropic’s position, and the dispute highlights broader tensions over AI ethics and government demand.Weiterlesen