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Anthropic’s $200 million contract with the Department of Defense collapsed last week after the two parties failed to reach an agreement on what grade the Army could obtain. Unrestricted access To anthropic artificial intelligence.
When the Department of Defense struck a deal with OpenAI instead, it looked like the Army’s relationship with Anthropic would be coming to an end — but new reports from Financial Times and Bloomberg He says Amodei has resumed negotiations with Pentagon official Emil Michael.
These talks are said to be part of an effort to reach a compromise on a contract that specifies how the Pentagon can continue access to Anthropic’s AI models.
It would be surprising to see Anthropic seek a new deal, given the amount of vitriol that has been exchanged between the parties involved. But the compromise could still be attractive to both sides, as the Pentagon already relies on Anthropic technology, and a sudden shift to OpenAI systems would be disruptive.
The dispute began when Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei expressed concern about a provision allowing the military to use Anthropic’s AI for “any lawful use.” Amodei stressed that the company would not allow its technology to be used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons, and wanted the contract to more clearly prohibit such uses. When Anthropic refused to comply, the Department of Defense turned around and Make a deal With OpenAI instead.
Since then, figures on both sides have been vocal about their frustrations. Michael described Amodei as a “liar” with a “God complex.” Amodei threw some jabs of his own at DoD and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman message It was reportedly sent to Anthropic employees this week, calling the OpenAI deal “security theater” and messaging around it “outright lies.”
“The main reason OpenAI accepted (the Department of Defense deal) is that we don’t care about appeasing employees, we actually care about preventing abuses,” Amodei wrote in the memo.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pledged to declare Anthropology “Supply chain risks“, essentially blacklisting the company to prevent it from doing business with any other company that does business with the US military — though it has yet to take any legal action to that effect. This type of designation is typically reserved for foreign adversaries, and it’s not clear whether it would survive a court challenge.