| Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is giving Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei until Friday night to offer the U.S. military unfettered access to the company's AI model, Axios' Dave Lawler and Maria Curi report exclusively. - Hegseth told Amodei in a meeting today that the Pentagon will either cut ties with Anthropic and declare it a "supply chain risk," or invoke the Defense Production Act, forcing it to tailor its model to the military's needs.
🚀 Anthropic has said that it's willing to work with the Pentagon — but won't allow its model to be used for mass surveillance of Americans, or to develop weapons that fire without human involvement. - Anthropic's Claude is the only AI model currently used for the military's most sensitive work.
🥶 A senior Defense official said the meeting was "not warm and fuzzy at all." - Another source told Axios that it remained "cordial" with no voices raised on either side, and that Hegseth praised Claude.
- Hegseth told Amodei that he won't let any company dictate the terms under which the Pentagon makes operational decisions, or object to individual uses.
An Anthropic spokesperson told Axios: "We continued good-faith conversations about our usage policy to ensure Anthropic can continue to support the government's national security mission in line with what our models can reliably and responsibly do." 🤖 What we're watching: Elon Musk's xAI recently signed a contract to bring its AI model, Grok, into classified military settings. - The Pentagon is hastening similar talks with OpenAI and Google, sources tell Axios.
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