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Technology leaders warn the Trump administration about risks of Anthropic’s advanced models | International | Central News Agency CNA



Please agree to our privacy policy to enable news listening. (Central News Agency, Washington, 13th Comprehensive Foreign Report) According to people familiar with the matter, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy expressed concerns about the security risks that may be posed by the most advanced models of artificial intelligence (AI) company Anthropic when he met with senior leaders of the U.S. Trump administration this week with many technology industry leaders. Amazon did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment. Citing national security concerns, the Trump administration yesterday ordered Anthropic to ban all foreigners from using its latest AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, regardless of whether they live in the United States or abroad. In response, Anthropic announced that it would disable access to the relevant models globally. Anthropic posted on its blog yesterday that the U.S. government believes there is a way to bypass (that is, “jailbreak”) the protection mechanism. If so, unscrupulous people can use the AI ​​model Fable 5 to identify software vulnerabilities. Anthropic said in a blog post that the U.S. government’s restrictions are implemented in the form of export controls. The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), which is responsible for export controls, did not respond to a request for comment. Some experts who support export controls on advanced AI models are puzzled by the Trump administration’s move, which affects both U.S. allies and adversaries. Jimmy Goodrich, a senior researcher at the University of California’s Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation, said that this measure was not well thought out because the ban even prevented “Canadians and British people working at Anthropic from using the model for research and development.” Anthropic, which has secretly submitted an application for a U.S. initial public offering (IPO), has had disputes with Trump administration officials in the past. The order was issued suddenly just when the previous disputes between the two parties seemed to be cooling down. (Compiled by: Cai Jiamin) 1150614 Support the Central News Agency’s choice to stand with the facts. Every donation you make is a small amount of sponsorship to protect press freedom. Download the Central News Agency’s “First-hand News” APP to get the latest news in real time. The text, pictures and audio and video of this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast or publicly transmitted and used without authorization.



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SpaceX’s Stratospheric IPO Launch Has a Couple of Heavy-Duty Stowaways



The AI boom is usually framed as a cutthroat competition between a small handful of powerful tech companies. That’s accurate, but it also overlooks a much subtler, stranger, and more alarming dynamic: Namely, that the very same companies that are competing to build and control the future of AI are at the same time bankrolling one another.

The enormous demand for compute and energy from frontier AI developers like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google has been forcing those companies to buy and lease resources from their erstwhile competitors, creating a messy web of interdependency of von Bismarckian proportions. It’s also resulted in a complex network of circular moneymaking arrangements. The most common goes something like this: Company A buys AI chips from Company B, which then invests in Company A to help fuel its AI efforts, ratcheting up its data center expansion plans and fueling its demand for Company B’s chips. The carousel of capital spins on and on from there. For the past couple of years, Nvidia has been at the epicentre of the ever-evolving web of circular dealmaking that’s come to enmesh the AI industry. The chipmaker’s graphics processing units (GPUs) have been—and continue to be—the most valuable building block in the AI boom. It’s also been investing heavily in AI startups like OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI, which was acquired by SpaceX in February. So while the AI labs buy AI chips from Nvidia, the latter returns the favor by funding the construction of the massive data centers that house the chips and ultimately power models like ChatGPT and Grok. 

In November, it was announced that Anthropic would pay $30 billion for expanded access to Azure, Microsoft’s cloud computing arm, which is powered by graphics processing units (GPUs) made by Nvidia. Nvidia and Microsoft, in turn, said they would invest up to $10 billion and up to $5 billion in Anthropic, respectively. (See the circularity?) The extra compute helped Anthropic meet demand from businesses using its popular enterprise tools and from developers using its popular coding assistant, Claude Code. It usurped OpenAI last month as the highest valued AI startup in the world. 

Bloomberg published a helpful graphic in January that visualizes the web of circular deals being woven across the AI industry. But the number of such agreements has continued to grow since that time. In March, for example, Amazon committed $50 billion to OpenAI as part of the ChatGPT-maker’s most recent funding round, while OpenAI said it would invest an additional $100 billion into its existing partnership with Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon’s cloud computing business. Behind the scenes, Nvidia is selling AI chips to both Amazon and OpenAI, entwining the fortunes of all three companies. You get the idea. Foundations of sand? Tech leaders tend to argue that the burgeoning circularity extending across the industry is a virtuous circle that benefits everyone. But skeptics see a noose that’s tightening around the tech sector, and perhaps even around the throat of the U.S. economy itself.

Companies driving the AI boom, like OpenAI and Anthropic, have yet to become profitable, and the surge of investment across the industry in recent years has very much been a gamble that the technology will deliver on the financial growth that companies have been promising. The concern is that the more intertwined these companies become, channeling money back and forth for a technology that has yet to deliver real value for businesses, the chances of financial catastrophe grow. If demand for AI fails to take off in the way that people like Sam Altman, Dario Amodei, and Elon Musk predict it will, many of those enormous data centers that have been built over the past few years will suddenly become useless. The AI labs will suddenly be unable to pay their bills to the companies providing them with chips and compute; and since those same companies were the major backers of the rest of the industry, the whole edifice could crumble—skeptics warn—into the foundation of sand upon which it was built. The economic impact of such a collapse could have consequences far beyond Silicon Valley itself. The ballooning investments in the tech companies driving the AI race in recent years have become an important financial driver for the U.S. economy itself, helping to bolster the country’s GDP at a time when it’s fighting through the twin headwinds posed by inflation and tariffs. Millions of Americans’ financial security is also tied directly to the fortunes of the tech industry through common financial vehicles like 401(k) plans.

The SpaceX IPO rocket On Thursday, SpaceX—officially called Space Exploration Technologies Corp.—announced the finalization of its long-awaited initial public offering (IPO) price of $135 per share. It’s by far the biggest IPO in history and has officially minted Musk, its founder and CEO, as the world’s first trillionaire. SpaceX is probably best-known as a manufacturer of rockets and satellites (Starlink is a subsidiary), but it’s also become a major force in the AI industry through its data center infrastructure. It’s been selling the compute created by these data centers to some of the very companies that are supposed to be competing with xAI.

For example, Anthropic announced last month it had agreed to pay $1.25 billion per month to access SpaceX’s Colossus 1 data center, located in Memphis, Tennessee, billed by SpaceX as “the world’s biggest AI supercomputer.” Through the deal, Anthropic said it would gain access to 300 megawatts of electricity powered by 220,000 Nvidia GPUs. And last week, SpaceX said it had inked a multiyear agreement with Google, through which Google will pay $920 million per month for compute to power its AI efforts. (The collaboration is expected to kick off in October and extend through July of 2029.) Meanwhile, Anthropic and Google have been deepening their own financial ties: In April, Google said it would invest up to $40 billion in Anthropic, which had recently teased Mythos, a model that was supposedly too powerful to release publicly. And according to a report published Thursday by The Information, Anthropic is also moving ahead with plans to lease data centers from a number of U.S. companies, with Google potentially stepping in as a guarantor. Nvidia, Amazon, Google, and the other tech giants that are providing new AI startups with computing power are often referred to as “picks and shovels” companies of the AI boom, referring to the industry that profited from miners’ dreams of riches during the California Gold Rush. The vast majority of miners didn’t strike gold, but the ones providing the picks and shovels profited from the broader frenzy of speculation and greed. By investing in its data center infrastructure and making lucrative deals with Google and Anthropic, SpaceX is clearly trying to become a dominant picks and shovels company in the AI race. 

Much of the early excitement from investors in the SpaceX IPO has been driven by Musk’s promise of building data centers in space, powered by an unlimited supply of solar energy. It’s the sort of futuristic-sounding vision—along with Musk’s goal of colonizing Mars—that appeals to many investors who (not unreasonably) believe in his ability to deliver on impossible-sounding promises. But it also remains to be seen if data centers in space are technically achievable. Coupled with the uncertainty of the future of the AI industry to which SpaceX has hitched its fortunes, its stock start to look like a riskier investment than its initial market surge would suggest. Yes, the rocket that is SpaceX’s valuation has the twin engines of Google and Anthropic—two of the MVPs of the AI boom—powering it. But the circularity of the relationship between these companies makes all of their situations more precarious than they may initially appear. If the rocket comes crashing back down to Earth, it could bring much more than Google and Anthropic down with it.



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It Sure Seems Like Pete Hegseth Is Losing His War Against Anthropic



News broke this week that the National Security Agency (NSA) is using Anthropic’s Mythos AI model for offensive cyber operations, likely against China and Iran. It makes a lot of sense, given the reported power of Mythos to find and exploit vulnerabilities. But it’s just the latest sign that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth might be losing his war against Anthropic. Anthropic has installed about half a dozen engineers at NSA, according to the Financial Times, though the newspaper reports it’s unclear if Anthropic staff are actively assisting in operations against adversarial countries. At the very least, they’re customizing the AI models for specific applications, according to the FT. Back in March, the Pentagon labeled Anthropic a supply chain risk because the company refused to modify the guardrails on Claude. The Defense Department wanted to use Claude without any restrictions, but Anthropic wouldn’t budge on two issues: use of its AI for autonomous weapons and mass surveillance of Americans.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei met with Hegseth on Feb. 24, but they couldn’t come to an agreement and the Defense Secretary launched a crusade against the company to put it in its place. Anthropic wouldn’t budge, so President Donald Trump gave his blessing to blacklist the company, setting in motion a process to purge Claude from government systems. But it doesn’t seem like Hegseth’s war, waged in conjunction with Emil Michael, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, is going so well.

The argument that Hegseth and his underlings were trying to make, that Anthropic was a unique threat to national security, never made any sense. The company has been more than willing to work with the U.S. military and its allies, as has been demonstrated again and again. Amodei visited in the White House in mid-April and Reuters has a new report Friday that the dispute between Anthropic and the Trump regime has been “showing signs of easing,” especially as the company prepares to go public. That’s important for Anthropic as it makes an initial public offering more safe for investors if the AI company has a good relationship with the government. But it also just makes sense for the military and intelligence communities, because they want access to the most advanced AI in the world.

Amodei was originally invited to the White House on May 21 for Trump’s planned signing of an executive order on AI, but that was derailed after the White House decided it didn’t like some of the provisions. But it will be interesting to watch the jockeying for power among the AI giants as they curry favor with Trump. OpenAI’s Sam Altman and xAI’s Elon Musk have their own feud going, and it can be tough to become the favorite oligarch when you have so many sociopathic billionaires in line for their government money. NOTUS published a report Thursday that Altman has been floating the idea of the government taking a stake in OpenAI with Trump ever since the start of the president’s second term. The stake might be used for things “such as distributing a dividend payment to all American households,” according to NOTUS, an idea that’s become popular among AI enthusiasts who believe the tech will displace millions of workers and cause massive unemployment. The U.S. government has already taken a stake in at least ten companies, according to the Wall Street Journal, in a highly unusual move typically reserved for extraordinary circumstances. The U.S. has a 10% stake in Intel and a golden share in U.S. Steel. But if the government takes a stake in OpenAI it sounds like that’s being pitched as something that could be used as a universal basic income or some other nominal form of financial benefit to Americans. The American people aren’t getting direct payments from Intel over that investment.

How wise would it be to tie the government’s fortune to huge AI companies? That remains to be seen, especially as it potential sets up incentives to benefit private companies over others and intertwine the economic stability of the government with a specific form of tech. It might seem smart to have the government invested in the latest and greatest, but tech is constantly changing. Imagine if the government had invested heavily in VR headsets in the 2010s and bought Oculus, for example. The metaverse was pitched as the inevitable future, so much so that Facebook changed the name of its parent company to Meta. But that bet hasn’t panned out in many ways and it’s a good thing the U.S. taxpayer isn’t on the hook for what was always a big gamble.

Anthropic didn’t immediately respond to questions emailed Friday. Gizmodo will update this article if we hear back.



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