← Zurück zu Nachrichten

Tags: U.S. military

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Returns to Pentagon Negotiations to Preserve Defense Deal

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Returns to Pentagon Negotiations to Preserve Defense Deal
Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei is back at the negotiating table with the U.S. Department of Defense after talks collapsed over the Pentagon’s demand for unrestricted access to the company’s Claude AI models. The renewed discussions aim to prevent a supply‑chain‑risk designation that could bar Anthropic from future defense work. The dispute centers on the department’s push for open‑use language and Anthropic’s refusal to compromise on two red lines: prohibiting mass surveillance of Americans and banning lethal autonomous weapons without human oversight. Weiterlesen

Pentagon and Anthropic Clash Over Military Use of Claude AI

Pentagon and Anthropic Clash Over Military Use of Claude AI
The Pentagon is urging AI firms to permit the U.S. military to employ their technologies for all lawful purposes, but Anthropic has emerged as the most resistant. The department is reportedly threatening to end its $200 million contract with the company amid disagreements about how Claude models are used, including a reported deployment in an operation to capture former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. While other firms have shown flexibility, Anthropic focuses on hard limits around fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. Weiterlesen

OpenAI’s Open-Weight Models Draw Interest from U.S. Military

OpenAI’s Open-Weight Models Draw Interest from U.S. Military
OpenAI has released open-weight models that can run locally, giving the U.S. military and defense contractors a new option for secure, air‑gapped AI applications. Companies such as Lilt and EdgeRunner AI are testing the models for translation and virtual assistant tasks, while the Pentagon has signed multi‑year deals with major AI firms to prototype generative‑AI tools. Experts note the benefits of customizability and privacy, but also warn of higher hallucination rates and infrastructure costs. Weiterlesen