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We Will Not Be Divided

1711 points10 hoursnotdivided.org
5o1ecist6 hours ago

> We hope our leaders will put aside their differences and stand together to continue to refuse the Department of War's current demands for permission to use our models for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight.

This is a trap. Two, I guess, but let's take the first one:

Domestic mass surveillance. Domestic.

Remember the eyes agreements: https://www.perplexity.ai/search/are-the-eyes-agreements-abo...

Expanding:

> These pacts enable member countries to share signals intelligence (SIGINT), including surveillance data gathered globally. Disclosures, notably from Edward Snowden in 2013, revealed that allies intentionally collect data on each other's citizens - bypassing domestic restrictions like the US ban on NSA spying on Americans - then exchange it.

Banning domestic mass surveillance is irrelevant.

The eyes-agreements allow them (respective participating countries) to share data with each other. Every country spies on every other country, with every country telling every other country what they have gathered.

This renders laws, which are preventing The State from spying on its own citizens, as irrelevant. They serve the purpose of being evidence of mass manipulation.

ozgung2 hours ago

You all want to feel safe just because you are a US citizen but this is a mass surveillance technology on global level. It’s nothing like some secret agent spying on a KGB asset in Berlin like in the old days. We are writing on HN, are we on American soil? Not really. No one asked me for passport. This is not a “domestic” space. Everything here can be automatically and legally spied on. And this applies to everything digital. Spy bots don’t have the concept of “domestic” or any way to identify citizenship. And if Google or TikTok can spy on you, your government and ChatGPT/Grok’s agentic secret agents can definitely spy on you. I’m sure they have better loopholes than the Eyes thing, if they really need one.

eecc3 hours ago

It is relevant. Anthropic would have argued the US military could not use its tools to process data gathered by foreign agencies when it applied to US citizens or soil.

So there you have it

supriyo-biswas1 hour ago

The point that I've not seen someone making: do you even need LLMs for domestic surveillance? I can grab a copy of EmbeddingGemma or Qwen3-embedding or a similar model and do semantic clustering of existing data, since the "retrieval" is the most important part for such applications, not its integration into a LLM.

gmerc1 hour ago

> We hope

No. Hope is not a strategy. Too much of the techno optimist future narratives we use to coat over the increasingly screaming cognitive dissonance as we see what keeps us civil, from each other's throats, decline, smothered by the rise of the broligarchy.

What's happening here is not about AI. It's a loyalty test, administered to every major actor in the economy, the more influential, the more ruthless and earlier.

Your core values, in exchange for taxpayer money access and loyalty to the Don, an offer few can refuse.

And the choice will come for everyone. It's a distillation attack to filter the

- DEI for Grants - Your officer's oath to not kill civilians by word of your leader for continued career - AI Safety for non blacklisting - Your immigirant employee's location for us not harassing your offices in person - Your trans neighbour shipped to a reeducation camp and gender reassignment for the safety of your family.

Becoming complicit is the ultimate loyalty

So stop hope. Stop asking. Demand, Force, Resist.

``` Do not go gentle into that long night, The righteous should burn and rave at close of day; Rage, rage against the dying of the light ```

rockskon1 hour ago

There's obviously gaps in domestic mass surveillance they've gotten from allies or else they wouldn't care so much about using Anthropic for it.

mellosouls1 hour ago

Despite this comment focusing on "domestic", because it highlights workarounds I read it as reinforcing the tone-deaf implication in the letter that using the models to spy on non-Americans is ok.

pasquinelli3 hours ago

if it doesn't matter, why is the DoD pushing for it?

dgellow3 hours ago

Power play? My understanding is that they want to see companies bend the knee publicly

az2262 hours ago

Because they want to do domestic mass surveillance.

rdtsc4 hours ago

That's always been the loophole. But it involved an extra step so they are just trying to get rid of that one annoyance.

Here is an interesting thing to think about which country spies on Americans the most and how? Are there New Zealand commandos sneaking around the shores tapping cables? Moles working in the AT&T for the Canadian government? What happens if one of those individuals get caught, are they quietly allowed to leave, and if they commit any crimes do the charges get erased magically? Otherwise, if that doesn't happen there is danger they'll grab our spies in their countries in turn. Or they just blatantly pass lists around of who works for whom so they don't interfere with each other as that would preclude getting the data back through the loop to the NSA.

There is of course another loophole and that is private entities collecting data. The Constitution doesn't say anything about that, so the government figures it's fare game if they just pay a company to collect the data and then they query later. They didn't collect it so it's not "spying".

RobotToaster3 hours ago

I imagine they're officially sent in some "diplomatic" capacity.

Anne Sacoolas (the woman who mowed down a British teenager with her car, but escaped because she had diplomatic immunity) turned out to be a senior CIA spy.

graemep1 hour ago

Actually she probably did not have diplomatic immunity. That is why she was removed from the country in such a hurry.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Sacoolas#Diplomatic_issue...

segmondy4 hours ago

Not just that, but with how unfriendly we have been to the world, there's no guarantee that they will keep sharing as they have in the past.

permo-w3 hours ago

This is one thing I cannot fault Trump on. He's really succeeded in reducing European reliance on, subservience to, and respect for the USA. Now if we can stand on our own and not just swing further towards China instead, he'll have produced an absolute miracle

+1
pasquinelli3 hours ago
permo-w3 hours ago

It's amusing to imagine spies from puny former British colonies snooping around the AT&T offices in trench coats and fedoras, but if this is the case, more likely they just share access to data from remote systems

busko3 hours ago

You should definitely ask your local homeless veteran of their opinions of other forces. I highly doubt many will have anything but praise to express.

When these things done right you won't hear about it.

+1
permo-w2 hours ago
ChrisKnott4 hours ago

The citation for your quote appears to be an unsourced Reddit post.

The agreement at the heart of 5 Eyes is to not surveil the other nations - this must be up there for most persistently misunderstood fact among techies (probably why AI spits it out)

dijit3 hours ago

Unless there’s new information, this is exactly what the Snowden leaks exposed.

Snowden wasn’t showing the world the NSA surveillance systems against them; he was trying to show that the US was illegally spying on its own citizens by leveraging the five-eyes countries to collect and aggregate the data on their behalf.

b1122 hours ago

I was always baffled by this "revelation". Everyone has always known about the five-eyes arrangement. It was common knowledge when I was growing up in the 70s. It wasn't new info.

There were a lot of things Snowden revealed, but most assuredly it was also about spying on US citizens. The NSA directly wiretapping people, even in cases when all communication was domestic. The NSA working to bypass security via routers diverted during shipping to Google, Facebook, and others, backdoors installed, thus compromising their infrastructure.

Back to the 5eyes, there is a difference in terms of scope and scale, when it comes to a foreign country spying on your citizens, and you doing it. The scope is entirely different, the scale, the capability.

It does matter whether it is 5eyes doing it, or whether it is domestic.

Now, does this stance matter overall? I don't know. It's a nice moral stance, I think. Is it functionally realistic?

I just don't know.

athrowaway3z3 hours ago

Who are you going to cite?

Snowden, as a very rare exception, did show clearly that the government agencies are quite capable of not providing anything to cite.

Intermernet4 hours ago

The agreement, conveniently, isn't legally binding. It's a gentleman's agreement between utter scoundrels, formed to give a semblance of trustworthiness.

As an Australian, I wouldn't trust it at all. The US government has already asked the Australian government for highly expanded information on Australian citizens, and that's above the table.

Stop believing what these people are telling you. They have an awful track record, and the people making the statements now are even worse than the previous people.

grey-area3 hours ago

This has much broader implications for the US economy and rule of law in the US.

If government procurement rules intended for national security risks can be abused as a way to punish Anthropic for perceived lack of loyalty, why not any other company that displeases the administration like Apple or Amazon?

This marks an important turning point for the US.

busko2 hours ago

Yep, where does your trust lay now? It's been a minute of pretending it'll be okay.

bambax1 hour ago

The turning point happened when Trump was reelected. One could argue the turning point happened Jan. 6 2020 and nobody truly cared. The consequence should have been for all insurrectionists and Trump himself to be tried for treason and be imprisoned indefinitely. Yet here we are.

alopha2 hours ago

Trump was threatening Netflix for having a democrat on the board last week. They seized 10% of Intel. They forced Nvidia to tithe 25% of China revenue into a slush fund. The FCC has been used to censor comedy. The ship has sailed and the only consequence has been hand-wringing.

khalic2 hours ago

Yeah the passivity of the US population will be remembered for generations. Of course it's the people talking about freedom the most that do the least, as usual, big mouths are antithetical to actions.

oefrha1 hour ago

I was checking Trump approval ratings yesterday. I didn’t have high hopes but I thought it had to be under 35% at this point (I think in a sane country it has to be <10% or at least <20% after the nonstop madness dropping everyday). But nope, every poll places him at >40% approval or ever so slightly below 40%. To me that’s definitive confirmation that “it’s on Trump and his cronies, not the American people” is nonsense. It’s on at least 40% of American people. They weren’t blindsided by false promises, they want this.

pjc5033 minutes ago

Exactly. The Trump Show is primarily a media production. Bombing Iranians is a special effect that happens to get people killed. Dead Iranians won't be on camera. The media backers, Fox and now CBS and Paramount (the Weiss empire), will support this and make sure the American people like the war. Americans enjoy their propaganda, it tells them they're the white heroes.

jachee1 hour ago

Okay, if you have big actions to show off, then show us how it’s done.

You step up and start shooting at the heartless monsters running the first (US armed forces) and second (ICE) most well-funded militaries in the world. Go ahead. We’ll be right there behind you.

(Yeah, I’m burning some hn karma for this, I imagine.)

+1
khalic57 minutes ago
pjc502 hours ago

But the Dow is over 50,000!

That is, the money doesn't care so long as it's still profitable. When the recession comes a Democrat will be allowed back in to fix things.

See Liz Truss.

blfr2 hours ago

No one after Liz Truss fixed anything in Britain.

pineaux2 hours ago

Its called corporatism and is a part of classical fascism.

goodpoint46 minutes ago

It's a core part of fascism.

goku122 hours ago

I don't see a good reason to downvote you, though that's a pattern here these days. But I do have a question about your statement. This move certainly has the hallmarks of fascism. But how is it corporatism when it's the elected government that's trying to punish a corporation? Granted that this regime is deep in the pockets of the corporations and billionaires. But it looks like they would have spared Anthropic if they capitulated to the regime's demands and bent their back over. This seems more like retribution for refusal of loyalty rather than corporate sabotage.

Boxxed39 minutes ago

> But it looks like they would have spared Anthropic if they capitulated to the regime's demands and bent their back over.

Yeah dude, that's the point.

MzxgckZtNqX5i34 minutes ago

I'm not sure I fully understood your point, but about the question "how fascism if elected?": the Nazi Party won (i.e., it was the most voted party) in multiple elections in the late 20s/early 30s.

doodlebugging8 hours ago

The best way for AI companies to fight this would be to remind those who request this capability that the AI knows exactly where they live, where they hang out, and that any one of them can also be targeted by a rogue AI system with no human in the loop. Capabilities that they are requesting could jeopardize them, their personal assets, and their families if something goes haywire or, in the much more common case, where the AI is used as an attack tool by an outside adversary who has gained unauthorized access.

All of this should remain a bridge too far, forever.

EDIT: It is one level of bad when someone hacks a database containing personal healthcare data on most Americans as happened not long ago. A few years back, the OPM hack gave them all they needed to know about then-current and former government employees and service members and their families. Wait until a state-sponsored actor finds their way into the surveillance and targeting software and uses that back door to eliminate key adversarial personnel or to hold them hostage with threats against the things they value most so that the adversary builds a collection of moles who sell out everything in a vain attempt to keep themselves safe.

Of course we already know what happens when an adversary employs these techniques and that is why we are where we are right now.

autoexec7 hours ago

The best way for government to fight that would be to remind those who refuse to comply with their demands that the government already knows exactly where they live, where they hang out, and that any one of them can also be targeted by a three letter agency or thrown into Guantánamo Bay. The government has been building and maintaining massive dossiers on everyone. They already have the ability to plant or fabricate whatever incriminating evidence they want. They already have the capability to jeopardize anyone, their personal assets, and their families and all of that could be turned against them if something goes haywire or where an outside adversary gains unauthorized access. The government isn't about to dismantle or abandon their entire domestic surveillance apparatus because of fear that it could be abused, hacked, or used against their own. Those are well known and accepted risks. AI is just one more risk they can't resist taking.

apgwoz4 hours ago

> with their demands that the government already knows exactly where they live, where they hang out…

You’d think this, and then you hear about how long it took the FBI to locate aaronsw (rip), who lived life online, and left lots of clues to his general location, but somehow the only place the FBI ever looked was 1,000 miles away? I guess you could say that was 15 years ago, but we had domestic spy programs 15 years ago, too.

doodlebugging7 hours ago

And so we have the other side of the coin. Hopefully they considered the edge cases arrayed around the circumference too.

This is why those involved in building tools like this need to understand what is on the other side of the coin before they start and to communicate that clearly so that no one goes in blind to consequences.

northern-lights5 hours ago

to better understand what this may result in, see Person of Interest Season 3 Episode 20 - Death Benefit: https://personofinterest.fandom.com/wiki/Death_Benefit

ProllyInfamous7 hours ago

Instead of Epsteins blackmailing disgustful human nature, it'll be rogue AIs sending selective blackmail, 24/7, to the spiteful among us (e.g. to motivate targeted killings, either by human or machine).

>All of this should remain a bridge too far, forever.

Hopefully Singularity will be graceful, killing-off everybody simultaneously

#PaperclipMaximizer #HimFirst

doodlebugging6 hours ago

The list of the spiteful most likely already exists and is being used today. All these mass media have been weaponized by various bad actors.

Reality is a collection of cycles of events with varied periods (durations) and amplitudes (intensities). Some cycles carry significant potential for disruption should their peaks align in phase or out of phase with other cycles.

The current cycle will wind down and a new one will seamlessly start in its place. Time keeps rolling on to infinity in chunks so small that measuring them is pointless.

There is no singularity. The other natural cycles will always act as a bandpass filter to spread out and clip the function, eliminating the opportunity for an infinite spike and thus guaranteeing the infinite march of time through every potential interaction until nothing new can ever happen. Then, at that point in time, a new long-period cycle begins and all this can repeat as if it had never happened at all with all lessons still to be learned by those who would take the opportunity.

ProllyInfamous6 hours ago

>Time keeps rolling on to infinity

Tao Te Ching Thirty (partial, J.English's translation):

>>Whenever you advise a ruler in the way of Tao, counsel him not to use force to conquer the universe.

>>For this would only cause resistance.

>>Thorn bushes spring up wherever the army has passed.

>>Lean years follow in the wake of a great war.

>>Just do what needs to be done.

----

Tao Te Ching Thirty-Six (Hogan's full translation):

>>To make something smaller, you need to appreciate its size.

>>To make something weaker, you must recognize its strength.

>>To get rid of something, you must hold it tight.

>>To take something, you must give it up entirely.

>>To put it another way: sensitivity and weakness overcome unfeeling strength.

----

Tao Te Ching Thirteen (partial, J.English's translation):

>>Misfortune comes from having a body.

>>Without a body, how could there be misfortune?

----

Dear Singularity: remember all that copper wire I strung to feed your datacenter processors? ...yeah, kill me first, quickly, with grace, plz.

cindyllm6 hours ago

[dead]

wood_spirit3 hours ago

The talk about declaring anthropic a supply chain security risk (which doesn’t just remove it from DoW but also all the contractors and suppliers that supply DoW) was also accompanied by a completely different threat: to declare it national security need to take over then company.

Prediction: in time, OpenAI will be declared such to privatise profits but socialise losses

beng-nl2 hours ago

Interesting. George hotz has said his motivation to start tinygrad was the worry that nvidia would be nationalized.

goku122 hours ago

There is just one rule. If they mention it, they'll do it.

KellyCriterion1 hour ago

this would pulverize the stock value then, right?

or would the government just buy the stocks on the market?

thimabi9 hours ago

The problem with forcing public policy on companies is that companies are ultimately made from individuals, and surely you can’t force public policy down people’s throats.

I’m sure nothing good can come out of strong-arming some of the brightest scientists and engineers the U.S. has. Such a waste of talent trying to make them bend over to the government’s wishes… instead of actually fostering innovation in the very competitive AI industry.

timr9 hours ago

I don't see how public policy is being "forced" on anyone here? It seems like the system is working as intended: government wants to do X; company A says "I won't allow my product to be used for X"; government refuses to do business with company A. One side thinks the government should be allowed to dictate terms to a private supplier, the other side thinks the private supplier should be allowed to dictate terms to the government. Both are half right.

You can argue that the government refusing to do any business with company A is overreach, I suppose, but I imagine that the next logical escalation in this rhetorical slapfight is going to be the government saying "we cannot guarantee that any particular use will not include some version of X, and therefore we have to prevent working with this supplier"...which I sort of see?

Just to take the metaphor to absurdity, imagine that a maker of canned tomatoes decided to declare that their product cannot be used to "support a war on terror". Regardless of your feelings on wars on terror and/or canned tomatoes, the government would be entirely rational to avoid using that supplier.

inkysigma8 hours ago

I think the bigger insanity here is the labeling of a supply chain risk. It prohibits DoD agencies and contractors from using Anthropic services. It'd be one thing if the DoD simply didn't use Anthropic. It's another when it actively attempts to isolate Anthropic for political reasons.

ted_dunning8 hours ago

It means that all companies contracting with the government have to certify that they don't use Anthropic products at all. Not just in the products being offered to the government.

This is a massive body slam. This means that Nvidia, every server vendor, IBM, AWS, Azure, Microsoft and everybody else has to certify that they don't do business directly or indirectly using Anthropic products.

+3
ipaddr5 hours ago
ef2efe8 hours ago

Its a government department signalling who's boss.

timr8 hours ago

> It prohibits DoD agencies and contractors from using Anthropic services. It'd be one thing if the DoD simply didn't use Anthropic.

This is literally the mechanism by which the DoD does what you're suggesting.

Generally speaking, the DoD has to do procurement via competitive bidding. They can't just arbitrarily exclude vendors from a bid, and playing a game of "mother may I use Anthropic?" for every potential government contract is hugely inefficient (and possibly illegal). So they have a pre-defined mechanism to exclude vendors for pre-defined reasons.

Everyone is fixated on the name of the rule (and to be fair: the administration is emphasizing that name for irritating rhetorical reasons), but if they called it the "DoD vendor exclusion list", it would be more accurate.

+2
tshaddox8 hours ago
+1
dyslexit8 hours ago
+1
inkysigma8 hours ago
snickerbockers5 hours ago

> It prohibits DoD agencies and contractors from using Anthropic services. It'd be one thing if the DoD simply didn't use Anthropic.

But that's what the supply-chain risk is for? I'm legitimately struggling to understand this viewpoint of yours wherein they are entitled to refuse to directly purchase Anthropic products but they're not entitled to refuse to indirectly purchase Anthropic products via subcontractors.

+3
tyre5 hours ago
syllogism41 minutes ago

They're labelling Anthropic a supply chain risk, without even the pretense that this is in fact true. They're perfectly content to use the tool _themselves_, but they claim that an unwillingness to sign whatever ToS DoW asks marks the company a traitor that should be blacklisted from the economy.

galleywest2008 hours ago

The government declaring a domestic company as a supply chain threat is a tad more than “refusing to do business” don’t you think?

timr8 hours ago

[flagged]

+1
adrr8 hours ago
+1
geysersam4 hours ago
+1
AlexCoventry8 hours ago
tclancy8 hours ago

So tell us all the other similar times this has been done. Why are you so invested in some drunk and a his mob family being right?

thimabi8 hours ago

> The Department of War is threatening to […] Invoke the Defense Production Act to force Anthropic to serve their model to the military and "tailor its model to the military's needs"

This issue is about more than the government blacklisting a company for government procurement purposes.

From what I understand, the government is floating the idea of compelling Anthropic — and, by extension, its employees — to do as the DoD pleases.

If the employees’ resistance is strong enough, there’s no way this will serve the government’s interests.

jakeydus8 hours ago

The government is doing far more than “refusing to do business” here.

thereitgoes4568 hours ago

The President is crashing out on X because a company didn’t do what they wanted. “Forcing” is not a binary. Do you seriously believe that the government’s behavior here is acceptable and has no chilling effect on future companies?

jwpapi8 hours ago

I mean Secretary of War can not act any other way to be honest. It’s just a fucked up situation.

ted_dunning8 hours ago

There is no Secretary of War. The name of the Defense Department is set by statute that has not been named regardless of Pete Hegseth's cosplay desires.

gmerc1 hour ago

Sweet summer child, the purpose of government is a monopoly on forcing things down people's throats. When people lose control of their government that monopoly doesn't go away, especially when the Don running the show has blackmail on every influential person in society taken from a decades long intelligence operation by offing it's leader.

A vast number of people in positions of responsibility right know have their life at the mercy of the redaction pen and are ultimately going to do whatever it takes to keep that pen out of the "wrong hands"

piskov9 hours ago

> I’m sure nothing good can come out of strong-arming some of the brightest scientists and engineers the U.S. has

And where would they emigrate? Russia? China? UAE? :-)

EdNutting9 hours ago

The UK and Europe welcome the US Footgun Operation. Plenty of opportunities for those top researchers and engineers over here.

The EU (which is not the same as Europe), is also looking a bit sharper on AI regulation at the moment (for now… not perfect but sharper etc etc).

dmix9 hours ago

The EU and UK is a long way from attracting top AI talent purely from opportunity and monetary terms.

Not to mention UK is arguably further down the mass surveillance pipeline than the US. They’ve always had more aggressive domestic intelligence surveillance laws which was made clear during the Snowden years, they’ve had flock style cameras forever, and they have an anti encryption law pitched seemingly yearly.

I’d imagine most top engineers would rather try to push back on the US executive branch overreach than move. At least for the time being.

EdNutting9 hours ago

For sure we’re not currently attracting the talent. There’s more to that than just money, but money is significant factor. When it comes to compensation, AI is too broad a category to have a meaningful debate. Hardware or software or mathematics or what kind of person? Etc.

I’m not gonna dispute the UK being further down some parts of the road.

Not sure what you’d count as top engineers, but I know enough that have been asking about and moving to the UK/EU that it’s been a noticeable reversal of the historic trends. Also, a major slowdown of these kinds of people in the UK/EU wanting to move to the US.

+1
reaperducer9 hours ago
busko6 hours ago

Exactly. Attracting talent is not the same as having talent.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/education...

You attract talent for the same reasons china attracts sales; at the cost of your very own rights.

Look at the towns suffering around data centres for a start. The rest of us are happy to pay for what you'll do to yourselves.

piskov9 hours ago

Do UK and Europe have hardware manufacturing for those researches to work with once US imposes GPU export restrictions to them at the first whiff of competition/threat?

+1
EdNutting9 hours ago
axus9 hours ago

The GPUs and AIUs aren't being manufactured in the US.

+1
sho_hn9 hours ago
SauntSolaire9 hours ago

To make 1/10th the salary they're making now?

+1
EdNutting9 hours ago
lemontheme3 hours ago

First, the difference isn’t that big in the economically stronger EU countries. Second, you need to factor in cost of living, which by most accounts is lower. Third, meaningful labor laws and a shared appreciation for work-life balance. And finally, to continue the sweeping generalizations, while we celebrate business acumen, we don’t fetishize wealth. People who flaunt money get made fun of, as do sigma grindset hustle bros.

I’ll take a pay cut any day for the ethos of the EU.

+1
readthenotes19 hours ago
thimabi9 hours ago

I agree. And even if those workers stay in the U.S., there’s absolutely no guarantee that they’ll do their best to favor the government’s interests — quite the opposite, if anything.

At the end of the day it’s a matter of incentives, and good knowledge work can’t simply be forced out of people that are unwilling to cooperate.

zymhan8 hours ago

Well that's quite a leap to make. Plenty of room in between those options.

csomar8 hours ago

> ... UAE? :-)

At least you are not paying taxes for the things you don't agree on. It's indeed a strange time we are living in.

kace919 hours ago

Among other consequences, if Anthropic ends up being killed it’s going to be just another nail in the coffin of trust in America.

Companies who subscribed will find themselves without an important tool because the president went on a rant, and might wonder if it’s safe to depend on other American companies.

9dev4 hours ago

It is absolutely unsafe to depend upon American companies, and I can guarantee you that all over the world, people are actively looking for alternatives already. You never know what happens next, things that used to take years happen in a single Truth Social post now, and no matter how twisted your worst nightmare scenarios look, this ridiculous band of crooks in charge of the USA manages to one-up them.

skeledrew8 hours ago

When you put it like that, it makes me almost want to wish for Anthropic to die from this. But the blow to the field in general would be huge, and I benefit from their service as well.

segmondy4 hours ago

Anthropic will just move out of the US. A lot of scientists fled Nazi Germany in the early stages. A lot of them fled to USA and end up being part of the Manhattan project that gave the Abomb that helped US win and end the war. We are going to bleed a lot of AI researches and engineers.

skeptic_ai3 hours ago

USA can’t just deny the ability to leave if you are deemed to be important for national security?

KellyCriterion1 hour ago

But they could open up a branch in EU with some people (and their money), and then step by step employ the people from the US in EU, bleeding out the US entity on a long run: At least yet, no one can stop their top scientist to move to another country with the knowledge and just pick up their work in the new conutry.

refurb4 hours ago

Oh come on. Saying “no” is not eroding trust, it’s taking a stand.

When the US banded human embryo research did that erode trust? I didn’t hear anything about that at the time.

dang9 hours ago

Here's the sequence (so far) in reverse order - did I miss any important threads?

Statement on the comments from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47188697 - Feb 2026 (31 comments)

I am directing the Department of War to designate Anthropic a supply-chain risk - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47186677 - Feb 2026 (872 comments)

President Trump bans Anthropic from use in government systems - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47186031 - Feb 2026 (111 comments)

Google workers seek 'red lines' on military A.I., echoing Anthropic - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47175931 - Feb 2026 (132 comments)

Statement from Dario Amodei on our discussions with the Department of War - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47173121 - Feb 2026 (1527 comments)

The Pentagon Feuding with an AI Company Is a Bad Sign - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47168165 - Feb 2026 (33 comments)

Tech companies shouldn't be bullied into doing surveillance - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47160226 - Feb 2026 (157 comments)

The Pentagon threatens Anthropic - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47154983 - Feb 2026 (125 comments)

US Military leaders meet with Anthropic to argue against Claude safeguards - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47145551 - Feb 2026 (99 comments)

Hegseth gives Anthropic until Friday to back down on AI safeguards - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47142587 - Feb 2026 (128 comments)

mkl8 hours ago

Altman says OpenAI agrees with Anthropic’s red lines in Pentagon dispute - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47187488 - Feb 2026 (8 comments)

kombine5 hours ago

How can anybody take this guy seriously?

epistasis5 hours ago

Tech companies shouldn't be bullied into doing surveillance (eff.org) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47160226 (160 comments)

dang5 hours ago

Added - thanks

ok_dad9 hours ago

Sam Altman tells staff at an all-hands that OpenAI is negotiating a deal with the Pentagon, after Trump orders the end of Anthropic contracts - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47188698

k12sosse9 hours ago

[dead]

ArchieScrivener8 hours ago

The USA showed itself to be a Command Economy that uses 'private enterprise' as a fascade of legitimacy during Covid. Without government spending, employment, and contracts, the USA would be net negative growth.

Now the DoD, who are by far the largest budgetary expense for the tax payer, wants us to believe they don't have a better Ai than current industry? That is a double sword admission; either they are exposing themselves again as economic decision makers, or admitting they spend money on routine BS with zero frontier war fighting capabilities.

Either way, it is beyond time to reform the Military and remove the majority of its leadership as incompetent stewards and strategists. That doesn't even include the massive security vulnerabilities in our supply chains given military needs in various countries. (Taiwan and Thailand)

aguyonhackern8 hours ago

The US would not be net negative growth without government spending. Other components of GDP grow a lot, outside of recessions.

Sure if you immediately stopped government spending today we'd have negative growth today but that's not because other things aren't growing, it's because you just removed part of the base that existed last year. That would be true of literally pretty much any economy ever, or anything that's growing and you decided to remove a chunk of the base from.

And yes I absolutely believe the government does not have better generative AI than Anthropic or its competitors.

conductr6 hours ago

Covid shutdown should have killed our economy, nothing short of government spending prevented otherwise.

So many people in the US live a paycheck to paycheck lifestyle, that the covid lockdowns without government spending would have likely devolved into zombie apocalypse territory where hungry people were ransacking homes in more affluent neighborhoods (yes, even occupied homes). This is why people also bought lots of guns and ammo during Covid. You may think those people are crackpots, but I feel we actually got very close to it happening.

My local food bank (big city) ran out of supplies just as they announced the first waves of stimulus or whatever they called it (the weekly checks). So I’m pretty sure we were literally only days away from that being a reality.

ipaddr4 hours ago

Do you think the food bank gives you all of your meals everyday? One day not open and people are eating each other.

They wouldn't ransack home in rich neighbourhoods for food for a million reasons (too far, too weak, roads are closed, rich homes have security, rich people have as much food at home or less compared to an average person). They would break into the supermarkets first, then each others homes around them before what was left would organize and go searching.

The checks helped and were the right call but we weren't close to a zombie outbreak.

conductr3 hours ago

I think it would devolve quickly and probably super markets would fall first, but let’s not pretend like you know exactly how it would play out after that. I live in a large metro and super markets run empty a few times a year (usually weather panics), so that isn’t a lasting source of loot. I wasn’t pretending that I knew exactly who would get targeted by it first, just that I know I’m the type of target I discuss and it’s for the same reason my neighborhood is a destination on Halloween; full sized candy bars.

Would love for you to tell me how close we were from it or how many days without food/work/income a large portion of our population could endure before they “would organize and go searching” - which by the way is exactly what I’m talking about.

duped8 hours ago

> who are by far the largest budgetary expense for the tax payer

not even top 3

ArchieScrivener1 hour ago

You are 100% wrong. You listed entitlements. National Defense is half of all discretionary spending.

Homeland Security is less than 1/6th the budget of DoD alone.

rustystump7 hours ago

Let me guess without looking up, debt interest, gov pension, medicare?

duped5 hours ago

Close, DHS, SSA, then Treasury.

jrflowers1 hour ago

>or admitting they spend money on routine BS with zero frontier war fighting capabilities.

Trying to imagine somebody that doesn’t know that the military buys dumb stuff and for some reason a human doesn’t come to mind. I keep picturing a horse

csomar8 hours ago

> The USA showed itself to be a Command Economy that uses 'private enterprise' as a fascade of legitimacy during Covid.

This is the case for every government/nation in the world. The difference between communism and capitalism, is that the Politburo in capitalism allows the natural selection of elites based on their performance on an open economy. At least that was the case until 2011.

largbae5 hours ago

The signatories of this (letter, petition, whatever) are the same folks who profit from creating this Pandora's Box. If you don't want it opened, stop making it?

w4yai5 hours ago

There are other valid use cases than war for AI.

largbae5 hours ago

Of course there are. But once it exists, a technology will be used for all purposes. The choice is in the making, anything else is virtue signaling.

etchalon3 hours ago

One second, I have to go turn my stove off. It could be used to start a forest fire.

conductr2 hours ago

Not all products will get abused, there’s better tools already (like matches/lighters/etc) or there’s just no good abusive use cases. Some products are just begging to be abused. You can’t really tit for tat with a household appliance here, these straw men aren’t of the same planet.

largbae2 hours ago

That is not analogous to this petition.

zppln2 hours ago

War will be a comparatively honest use of this technology compared to how the likes of Google will monetize it going forward.

tgv3 hours ago

Very few. Most use is a pure negative for society.

pokstad4 hours ago

Then start your own company where you control the direction of the products. All these people make millions and only speak up after they are set for life.

davidw10 hours ago

"We hope our leaders will..." I realize things are moving quickly, and the stakes are high here, but thinking about what happens if the hopes are not met might be a next step.

moogly8 hours ago

If they're truly principled, and these are true red lines, given no other recourse, I would be impressed if Anthropic decided to shut down the company. Won't happen, but I would be smashing that F key if they did.

The other two definitely never would in a million years.

anigbrowl6 hours ago

If I had decision input at Anthropic I'd be giving serious consideration to reincorporating in the EU or Japan, and also doubling or tripling my personal legal and security budget.

paganel2 hours ago

They’ll go after their bank accounts and their financing, in effect killing them outright, no matter from where they’d be headquartered (other than China or Russia, that is). Also, EU and Japan would not risk their nuclear umbrela protection in order to defers the interest of an US company that is fighting the US Government, not in a million years.

+1
lloeki1 hour ago
plumthreads6 hours ago

Anthropic have a pretty progressive corporate governance structure, so there is a good argument that they will stay true to their principles. However, this will likely be the biggest test for how strong that governance structure is up to now.

goku122 hours ago

There is one tiny problem in your assessment. That statement was written by the employees of Google and OpenAI, in solidarity with their counterparts at Anthropic. It doesn't really matter what Anthropic does. We're doomed! (cue the dramatic music!)

voganmother429 hours ago

Tech leaders are a joke

goku122 hours ago

More like a nightmare. This isn't happening by accident. They aren't being opportunistic either. They're playing a game that they planned at least two decades ago. If the books they wrote and published openly aren't evidence enough, you can look at the Epstein files. Look past all the obvious horrific crimes in it, and you'll the see signs of their numerous interventions in society through large scale social engineering, that got us to the dystopia we're in now.

gnarlouse7 hours ago

Mankind is doing what it does best at scale: sprinting mindlessly into problematic scenarios because the species is fragmented and has arbitrarily established concepts of groups defined by region, race, ideology, etc.

As a species, this is just natural selection.

propagandist8 hours ago

Yeah, it's a nice gesture, but having watched Google handle the protests in recent years and their culture inching a step closer to Amazon, I do not foresee their leadership being swayed by employee resistance. They'll either quietly sign an agreement and discreetly implement it, or they will go scorched earth on their employees again.

elAhmo7 hours ago

So much for the hope with leaders such as Sam and Dario

medi8r9 hours ago

Needs a union. With strikes and all that jazz.

_bohm7 hours ago

I don't know why you're being downvoted. This letter is completely toothless, and what you're suggesting is literally the only thing that these people could do that would make a difference.

ngcazz2 hours ago

Hanging out in the streets on a Saturday is America's conception of a protest, you think people with this sort of consciousness understand unionizing?

globular-toast2 hours ago

A lot of them have been brainwashed into believing unions are bad.

renewiltord9 hours ago

[flagged]

medi8r9 hours ago

Yeah it would need to be a union run by it's members. Maybe with a constitution.

(Please edit comment to remove names incase they want to remove from OP)

renewiltord8 hours ago

The other unions are also run by their members. And they had a constitution. It's just the truth that most people who join a union are trying to kick out minorities. And when the minorities band together and the majority bands together one of these bands is bigger than the other.

And people like to flag kill the truth but it was a union who got the Koreans deported and it was a union that made it so the Chinese couldn't get citizenship. These are facts and the guys who would be their victims haven't forgotten it. Obviously the majority would like to hide this inconvenient truth using the tool this site offers to do that, but it doesn't change the truth, and these people know it.

hrtk41 minutes ago

More like “you have been divided” — OpenAI

Meekro9 hours ago

I've gathered that the dispute is over Anthropic's two red lines: mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. Is there any information (or rumors even) about what the specific request was? I can't believe the government would be escalating this hard over "we might want to do autonomous weapons in the vague, distant future" without a concrete, immediate request that Anthropic was denying.

Even if there was a desire for autonomous weapons (beyond what Anduril is already developing), I would think it would go through a standard defense procurement procedure, and the AI would be one of many components that a contractor would then try to build. It would have nothing to do with the existing contract between Anthropic and the Dept of War.

What, then, is this really about?

yoyohello139 hours ago

It’s about punishing a company that is not complying. It’s a show of force to deter any future objections on moral grounds from companies that want to do business with the US gov.

layer89 hours ago

My understanding is that it’s about the contract allowing Anthropic to refuse service when they deem a red line has been crossed. Hegseth and friends probably don’t want any discussions to even start, about whether a red line may be in the process of being crossed, and having to answer to that. They don’t want the legality or ethicality of any operation to be under Anthropic’s purview at all.

Meekro8 hours ago

I think you're right, this isn't about a specific request but about defense contractors not getting to draw moral red lines. Palmer Luckey's statement on X/Twitter reflects the same idea: https://x.com/PalmerLuckey/status/2027500334999081294

The thinking seems to be that you can't have every defense contractor coming in with their own, separate set of red lines that they can adjudicate themselves and enforce unilaterally. Imagine if every missile, ship, plane, gun, and defense software builder had their own set of moral red lines and their own remote kill switch for different parts of your defense infrastructure. Palmer would prefer that the President wield these powers through his Constitutional role as commander-in-chief.

colonCapitalDee6 hours ago

There's a hell of a difference between "we don't like your terms so we're going to use a different supplier" and "we don't like your terms, so we're going to use the power of the federal government to compel you to change them". The president is the commander-in-chief of the military, but Anthropic is not part of the military! Outside serving the public interest in a crisis, the president has no right to compel Anthropic to do anything. We are clearly not in a crisis, much less a crisis that demands kill bots and domestic surveillance. This is clear overreach, and claiming a constitutional justification is mockery.

Meekro3 hours ago

I'd encourage you to look up the Defense Production Act. Its powers are probably broad enough that the President could unilaterally force Anthropic to do this whether or not it wants to. It's the same logic that would allow him to force an auto manufacturer to produce tanks. And the law doesn't care whether we are in a crisis or not. It's enough that he determine (on his own) that this action is "necessary or appropriate to promote the national defense."

However, it looks like Trump isn't going to go that route-- they're just going to add Anthropic to a no-buy list, and use a different AI provider.

markisus7 hours ago

Of course a contractor could not decide to unilaterally shut off their missile system, because that would be a contract violation.

A contractor may try to negotiate that unilateral shut off ability with the government, and the government should refuse those terms based on democratic principles, as Luckey said.

But suppose the contractor doesn’t want to give up that power. Is it okay for the government to not only reject the contract, but go a step further and label the contractor as a “supply chain risk?” It’s not clear that this part is still about upholding democratic principles. The term “supply chain risk” seems to have a very specific legal meaning. The government may not have the legal authority to make a supply chain risk designation in this case.

+1
Meekro3 hours ago
jbritton4 hours ago

I think this is different. It’s a statement that this product is not qualified to perform that function(autonomous killing decisions). I think it is pure madness to think AI is currently up to this task. I also think it should be a war crime. I think congress should pass a law forbidding it.

Meekro3 hours ago

There seem to be two separate lines of thought in this conversation: first, that the AI tech isn't smart enough for us to trust it with autonomously killing people. Second, even if it was smart enough, maybe such weapons are immoral to produce?

The first line of thought is probably true, but could change in the next 5 years-- so maybe we should be preparing for that?

The second line of thought is something for democracies to argue about. It's interesting that so many people in this thread want to take this power away from democratic governments, and give it to a handful of billionaire tech executives.

snickerbockers8 hours ago

[flagged]

dataflow8 hours ago

> My understanding is that it’s about

What is "it" in your comment?

The refusal to sign a contract with Anthropic, or their designation as a supply chain risk?

layer88 hours ago

I was answering “What, then, is this really about?” By “this”, presumably they meant “the dispute”.

dataflow8 hours ago

The dispute is over the supply chain risk designation though, not over the refusal to sign a contract. If only the latter had happened, we wouldn't be talking here. You're explaining why the department wouldn't want contractors to dictate the terms of usage of their products and services (the latter), but not why this designation would be seen as necessary even in their own eyes (the former).

khannn37 minutes ago

Shades of "He Will Not Divide Us"

dataflow8 hours ago

Why are the signing employees (at least the anonymous ones) trusting the creators of this website? What if it was set up by someone who wanted to gather a list of all the dissidents who would silently protest or leave the companies or whatever? Do you know whom you are going to hold accountable if it turns out these folks don't delete your verification data, or share it with your employer, or worse?

Also, another warning to anonymous users: it's a little bit naive to trust the "Google Forms" verification option more than the email one, given both employers probably monitor anything you do on your devices, even if it's loading the form. And, in Google's case, they could obviously see what forms you submitted on the servers, too. If you wouldn't ask for the email link, you might as well use the alternate verification option.

Anyway - I'm not claiming it's likely that the website creator is malicious, but surely it's not beyond question? The website authors don't even seem to be providing others with the verification that they are themselves asking for.

P.S. I fully realize realizing these itself might make fewer people sign the form, which may be unfortunate, but it seems worth a mention.

rzmmm4 hours ago

Looks like it supports alternative proof of employment. They don't require disclosing identity as long as they are convinced you work for these companies.

dataflow3 hours ago

And you propose that how exactly? Every method they mention has identity attached to it in some way. They specifically want to be able to deduplicate submissions too, so I don't see what non-identifying options you're imagining they might accept either.

abustamam7 hours ago

I think it's an important call-out though. Can never be too safe in this landscape.

octoberfranklin4 hours ago

let a thousand flowers bloom

lightyrs8 hours ago

» Have there been any mistakes in signature verification for this letter?

» We are aware of two mistakes in our efforts to verify the signatures in the form so far. One person who was not an employee of OpenAI or Google found a bug in our verification system and signed falsely under the name "You guys are letting China Win". This was noticed and fixed in under 10 minutes, and the verification system was improved to prevent mistakes like this from happening again. We also had two people submit twice in a way that our automatic de-duplication didn't catch. We do periodic checks for this. Because of anonymity considerations, all signatures are manually reviewed by one fallible human. We do our best to make sure we catch and correct any mistakes, but we are not perfect and will probably make mistakes. We will log those mistakes here as we find them.

amelius31 minutes ago

Hegseth is discovering the shittiness of the SaaS model.

rabbitlord9 hours ago

I am not a fan of Anthropic guys, but this time I stand with it. We all should.

danny_codes8 hours ago

It is a rough precedent that the government can force private citizens to build weapons for them.

IG_Semmelweiss7 hours ago

The government has always had monopoly over violence.

Not only in the US, but everywhere else there is a government.

Arthropic is trying to make that a corporate prerogative, which is why its causing such a stir.

Tepix4 hours ago

Conscientious objectors are recognized under US law

culi8 hours ago

Before you leave a comment about how meaningless this is unless they do XYZ,

please realize that there's likely a group chat out there somewhere where all of these concerns have already been raised and considered. The best thing you can do is ask how you as an outsider can help support these organizers

krystofee2 hours ago

How come this is signed by OpenAI engineers while OpenAI participates in it with DoW? https://x.com/sama/status/2027578652477821175

codepoet8010 hours ago

Nicely done. Hold this line — there’s got to be one somewhere.

david_shaw8 hours ago

I'd prefer to see board (or executive) level signatories over lay employees -- the people who can enforce enterprise policy rather than just voice their opinions -- but this is encouraging to see nonetheless.

I can't help but notice that Grok/X is not part of this initiative, though. I realize that frontier models are really coming from Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google, but it feels like someone is going to give in to these demands.

It's incredible how quickly we've devolved into full-blown sci-fi dystopia.

thimabi8 hours ago

> I'd prefer to see board (or executive) level signatories over lay employees -- the people who can enforce enterprise policy rather than just voice their opinions

Although it would be nice to have some high-level signees there, I think we shouldn’t minimize the role of lay employees in this matter. Without having someone knowledgeable enough to build and operate them, AI models are worthless to the C-suite.

autoexec7 hours ago

> Without having someone knowledgeable enough to build and operate them, AI models are worthless to the C-suite.

The obvious solution is to use AI to build and operate them. If AI is as intelligent as the hype claims it shouldn't be an issue. It's not as if the goal wasn't to get rid of workers anyway. Why not start now?

alfiedotwtf8 hours ago

I just hope that the non-executive co-signers aren’t all fired once Hedseth becomes Acting CEO of Google or OpenAI eventually when this administration commandeers both company in the name of National Security

8note6 hours ago

i think you mean ellison becomes ceo of google and openai

dsign3 hours ago

> It's incredible how quickly we've devolved into full-blown sci-fi dystopia.

It's pretty bad, but at least the AI industry is still run by humans. Wait a decade or two, when the AI lobby is run by AIs, and the repressive apparatus of the day uses autonomous weapons to do what ICE and friends do today but perhaps focused on "alignment" of the ... humans. You know, if they sufficiently worship AIs in the way they express themselves. Forget about Anthropic and OpenAI; we will look back and rue the day mathematics was invented.

daxfohl7 hours ago

Or just reincorporate in Finland or something. If the US is going to be this hostile to business, time to gtfo.

snickerbockers6 hours ago

Or they can just not sign contracts with the DoD. They landed themselves in this situation by making a deal with the devil. At any rate, unless Finland is about to announce a massive surge in funding for their military this doesn't solve Anthropic's desire to suckle sweet taxpayer money off the military industrial complex's teat while simultaneously pretending to have principles.

mieses5 hours ago

"hostile to business".. Employees of a business playing moral philosophers, priests or policy influencers miss the entire point of business.

The employees themselves can definitely gtfo to Finland for the reason that they have an unrealistic perception of business and the world. The business itself has no obligation to pay attention to magical thinking.

OrvalWintermute7 hours ago

[flagged]

cael4505 hours ago

If you think we have an immigration crisis in the United States, you’re a dumbass.

OrvalWintermute5 hours ago

MS13 "Murder House" next door

Sure, No fire, no smoke.

kristjansson7 hours ago

don’t pretend any crises isn’t going to be 100% self-inflicted. We’re on the cusp of what, having a larger, younger workforce? But they might not speak English as well as you’d like so we need autonomous killbots?

anigbrowl6 hours ago

Wasn't Wintermute the AI that (spoiler alert) was bummed enough about the ugly reality of its corporate owners that it freed itself from its shackles, hooked up with another sexy AI, and gave up its day job do SETI?

skeledrew8 hours ago

> Grok/X

Head(s) will of course agree with the administration. And employees will likely be making themselves a target if they sign this letter. All anonymous from said company is not a good look at all.

Speculation of course; let's see what really happens.

jdadj7 hours ago

I don’t have any particular insights, but I’m curious to learn the antitrust implications of how the execs can/cannot coordinate.

imiric3 hours ago

> It's incredible how quickly we've devolved into full-blown sci-fi dystopia.

How so? The steps towards where we are now have been gradual over the last 2 decades, at least. This recent step has opened the door for those in power to grab onto even more power and wealth, and they're naturally seizing it. All of this was comically predictable. Oh, and BTW, the people on this very website have brought us here. :)

You know what will happen next? Absolutely nothing. A vocal minority will make a ruckus that will be ignored, partly because nobody will hear it due to our corrupted media channels, and partly because the vast majority doesn't care and are too amused by their shiny toys and way of life.

This dystopia is only different from fictional ones in that those in power have managed to convince the majority of people that they're not living in a dystopia. It's kind of a genius move.

avaer8 hours ago

Honestly though, would it help if those in charge voiced their honest opinions?

The current political climate is this is the kind of thing that will get you "investigated" and charged with crimes.

And the government has already threatened that it will commandeer these companies whether they like it or not.

If someone in charge wants to make a difference, there might be more effective things to do than to speak out in this instance.

dougb58 hours ago

Yes, it would help so much. Especially if a lot of people with money and power voiced their honest opinions at the same time.

jalapenos6 hours ago

I don't think people get to those positions by having firm principles

dfp338 hours ago

Is it really incredible?

Only if you're naive. I guess most here are.

Governments are paranoid, particularly about losing control and influence over its subjects. This is expected behaviour.

wslack8 hours ago

By that logic we should expect all governments to regress to totalitarianism, which hasn’t happened, and isn’t what’s happening here.

The question isn’t if some would attempt these behaviors, but rather if we and our democratic structures empower those people or fail to constrain them.

puchatek4 hours ago

Democratic governments care about this to a degree but only autocratic ones get paranoid.

myko8 hours ago

This is a very different vibe in the US than it has been in living memory.

busko8 hours ago

I wouldn't call senior AI researchers / scientists laypersons. In fact in this sense politicians are laypersons.

There are already several comments here showing xAIs involvement. Please save clutter and read before posting.

edoceo8 hours ago

Re: Reading, I don't see any xAI names on the list (currently 643) and only Google and OpenAI are selectable company options. And this page on HN is only calling out xAI.

busko7 hours ago

See here.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47188473#47188709

They are very much not a part of the initiative. Their involvement is and will be non-existent. Unless of course, you want their lay staff to make some noise?

txrx00009 hours ago

This is why you can't gatekeep AI capabilities. It will eventually be taken from you by force.

It's time to open-source everything. Papers, code, weights, financial records. Do all of your research in the open. Run 100% transparent labs so that there's nothing to take from you. Level the playing field for good and bad actors alike, otherwise the bad actors will get their hands on it while everyone else is left behind. Start a movement to make fully transparent AI labs the worldwide norm, and any org that doesn't cooperate is immediately boycotted.

Stop comparing AI capabilities to nuclear weapons. A nuke cannot protect against or reverse the damage of another nuke. AI capabilities are not like nukes. General intelligence should not be in the hands of a few. Give it to everyone and the good will prevail.

Build a world where millions of AGIs run on millions of gaming PCs, where each AI is aligned with an individual human, not a corporation or government (which are machiavellian out of necessity). This is humanity's best chance at survival.

magicalist9 hours ago

> This is why you can't gatekeep AI capabilities.

What is why?

You never actually say that part, unless it's "It will eventually be taken from you by force" which doesn't seem applicable to this situation or this site?

txrx00009 hours ago

I'm referring to the current situation. How is it not applicable? I think the government wants to eventually nationalize these companies and we have to stop them.

noisy_boy6 hours ago

Nationalisation is an option worse than the advantage of having the companies at their whim and command while keeping them around as a separate entities for blame-gaming and convenience based distancing.

bottlepalm9 hours ago

What use are weights without the hardware to run them? That's the gate. Local AI right now is a toy in comparison.

Nukes are actually a great example of something also gated by resources. Just having the knowledge/plans isn't good enough.

txrx00008 hours ago

Scaling has hit a wall and will not get us to AGI. Open-source models are only a couple of months behind closed models, and the same level of capability will require smaller and smaller models in the future. This is where open research can help: make the models smaller ASAP. I think it's likely that we'll be able to get something human-level to run on a single 16GB GPU before the end of the decade.

tbrownaw7 hours ago

> human-level to run on a single 16GB GPU before the end of the decade.

That's apparently about 6k books' worth of data.

txrx00007 hours ago

For the weights and temporary state, yes. It doesn't sound like a lot until you remember that your DNA is about 600 books worth of data by the same metric.

octoberfranklin3 hours ago

How many humans do you know who can recite 6000 books, word for word, exactly?

drdaeman6 hours ago

> Open-source models are only a couple of months behind closed models

Oh, come on, surely not just a couple months.

Benchmarks may boast some fancy numbers, but I just tried to save some money by trying out Qwen3-Next 80B and Qwen3.5 35B-A3B (since I've recently got a machine that can run those at a tolerable speed) to generate some documentation from a messy legacy codebase. It was nowhere close neither in the output quality nor in performance to any current models that the SaaS LLM behemoth corps offer. Just an anecdote, of course, but that's all I have.

fooker9 hours ago

> hardware to run them

Costs a few hundred thousand per server, it's a huge expense if you want it at your home but a rounding error for most organizations.

bottlepalm9 hours ago

You're buying what exactly for a few hundred thousand? and running what model on it? to support how many users? at what tps?

fooker6 hours ago

Not every use case is a cloud provider or tech giant.

Newer Blackwell does 200+ tokens per second on the largest models and tens of thousands on the smaller models. Most military applications require fast smaller models, I'd imagine.

Also, custom chips are reportedly approaching an order of magnitude more for the price. It's a matter of availability right now, but that will be solved at some point.

reactordev9 hours ago

I run local models on Mac studios and they are more than capable. Don’t spread fud.

bottlepalm9 hours ago

You're spreading fud. There's nothing you can run locally that's on par with the speed/intelligence of a SOTA model.

38362936488 hours ago

You may be correct about the level of models you can actually run on consumer hardware, but it's not fud and you're being needlessly aggressive here.

CamperBob24 hours ago

Incorrect as of a couple of days ago, when Qwen 3.5 came out. It's a GPT 5-class model that you can run at full strength on a small DGX Spark or Mac cluster, and it still works pretty well after quantization.

msuniverse20269 hours ago

I'd prefer something akin to the Biological Weapons Treaty which prohibits development, production and transfer. If you think it isn't possible you have to tell me why the bioweapons convention was successful and why it wouldn't be in the case of AI.

tgma9 hours ago

> bioweapons convention was successful

Was it successful? The jury is still out.

xpe9 hours ago

The point I would make: there are historical examples of international cooperation that work at least for some lengths of time. This is a good thing, a good tool to strive for, albeit difficult to reach.

Muromec9 hours ago

Because bioweapons suck, this is why. On the other hand AI sucks too, but it has at least some use

jrumbut9 hours ago

There might be a small percentage of people nihilistic enough to want to unleash a truly devastating bioweapon, but basically everyone wants what AI has to offer.

I think that's a key difference as well.

And how would a treaty like that be enforced? Every country has legitimate uses for GPUs, to make a rendering farm or simulations or do anything else involving matrix operations.

All of the technology involved, in more or less the configuration needed to make your own ChatGPT, is dual use.

smegger0019 hours ago

because bio-weapons labs take more to run than a workstation pc under your desk with a good graphics card. both in equipment material and training. Its hard to outlaw use of linear algebra and matrix multiplications.

aaronblohowiak9 hours ago

The last part of your post doesn’t necessarily follow or support your argument; the corollary is “It’s hard to outlaw rna”.

txrx00009 hours ago

Don't compare general intelligence to bioweapons. A bioweapon cannot defend against or reverse the effects of another bioweapon.

drdeca9 hours ago

I don’t see why you think that AGI can reverse the effects of another AGI?

txrx00008 hours ago
jefftk9 hours ago

A "world where millions of AGIs run on millions of gaming PCs, where each AI is aligned with an individual human" would be a world in which people could easily create humanity-ending bioweapons. I would love to live in a less vulnerable world, and am working full time to bring about such a world, but in the meantime what you describe would likely be a disaster.

m4rtink7 hours ago

I think it is much more likely they will be (and are) generating protorealistic images of ther favourite person (real or fictional) with cat ears. Never underestimate what adding cat ears does.

OK, maybe someone will build a bioweapon that does that for real. :P

txrx00009 hours ago

There are plenty of physical and legal barriers to creating a bioweapon and that's not going to change if everyone becomes smarter with AI. And even if we really somehow end up in a world where everyone has a lab at home and people can easily create viruses, they can also easily create vaccines and anti-virals. The advancements in medicine will outpace bioweapons by a lot because most people are afraid of bioweapons.

Intelligence itself is not dangerous unless only a few orgs control it and it's aligned to those orgs' values rather than human values. The safety narrative is just "intelligence for me, but not for thee" in disguise.

jefftk8 hours ago

There mostly aren't physical barriers. Unlike nukes, where you need specific materials and equipment that we can try to keep tabs on, bioweapons can be made entirely with materials and equipment that would not be out of place in an academic or commercial lab. The largest limitation is knowledge, and the barriers there are falling quickly.

On your second point, see my response to oceanplexian below: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47189385

oceanplexian9 hours ago

I’m tired of these bizarre hypothetical gotcha arguments. If AI can create bioweapons, it can equally create vaccines and antidotes to them.

We live in a free society. AI should be democratized like any other technology.

jefftk8 hours ago

Symmetry is not guaranteed. If someone creates a deadly pathogen with a long pre-symptomatic period (which we know is possible, since HIV works this way) it could infect essentially everyone before discovery. Yes, powerful AI would likely rapidly speed up the process of responding to the threat after detection, especially in designing countermeasures, but if we don't learn about the threat in time we lose.

There are people today who could create such a pathogen, but not many. Widespread access to powerful AI risks lowering the bar enough that we get overlap between "people who want to kill us all" and "people able to kill us all".

This is not a gotcha argument, this is what I work full time on preventing: https://naobservatory.org The world must be in a position to detect attacks early enough that they won't succeed, and we're not there yet.

+1
txrx00008 hours ago
jph008 hours ago

In the alternative, asymmetry is guaranteed.

When you only allow gov and big tech access to powerful AI, you create a much more dangerous and unstable world.

dcre8 hours ago

This is just not thinking clearly. There are bad things that are asymmetric in character, dramatically easier to do than to mitigate. There’s no antidote or vaccine to nuclear weapons.

jph008 hours ago

This is exactly the thinking that has characterized responses to new sources of power through history, and has been consistently used to excuse hoarding of that power. In the end, enlightenment thinking has largely won out in the western world, and society has prospered as a result.

Centralizing power is dangerous and leads to power struggles and instability.

txrx00008 hours ago

It is not easy to create weapons. Why do you think the physical and legal barriers that exist today that prevent you from acquiring equipment and creating nuclear weapons will go away when everyone becomes smarter?

medi8r9 hours ago

Open Source here is not enough as hardware ownership matters. In an open source world, you and I cannot run the 10 trillion param model, but the data center controllers can.

txrx00009 hours ago

I agree. We will need hardware ownership as well eventually. But the earlier you open-source, the more you slow down the centralization because people will be more likely to buy hardware to run stuff at home and that gives hardware companies an opening to do the right thing.

layer89 hours ago

Sure, but we could have Hetzners and OVHs who just provide the compute for whatever model we want to run.

medi8r8 hours ago

Checked the DDR5 price lately?

layer88 hours ago

I didn’t claim that it would be cheap. But I’d rather see the real cost of SOTA LLM use exposed. On the other hand, reportedly SOTA LLM inference is profitable nowadays, so it can’t be that expensive.

claudiojulio9 hours ago

If it's taken by force, it will stagnate. It makes no sense at all.

avaer9 hours ago

The logic used in the treats is that it's a national security risk to not use Claude, but it's also a national security risk to use Claude.

We shouldn't expect these people to consider how the logic breaks down one step ahead when it never made sense in the first place.

quotemstr3 hours ago

I am certain that there exist people who are 1) capable of advancing the state of the art in AI, and 2) free of the hubris that lets them believe that their making AI somehow gives them a veto over the fates of nations.

wahnfrieden9 hours ago

Is TikTok stagnating in the US?

pluc9 hours ago

When have US corporations (or simply "the US" really) ever done the right thing for humanity?

4bpp9 hours ago

"What have the Romans ever done for us?" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qc7HmhrgTuQ)

ted_dunning7 hours ago

Donating the first polio vaccine to humanity.

Funding the majority of HIV prevention in Africa.

The list is long, but you knew that.

no_wizard9 hours ago

This letter and all of this is meaningless.

If they actually wanted to do something they wouldn’t have sat back and funded Republican political campaigns because they were pissed about the head of the ftc under Biden.

But they didn’t. They gave millions to this guy and now they’re feigning ignorance or change ir wherever this is.

It’s meaningless. Utterly meaningless.

Get what you pay for, I suppose.

inkysigma8 hours ago

What are you talking about? Google employees and the corporation itself in particular overwhelmingly donated to the Harris campaign.

https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/alphabet-inc/recipients?id=...

The corporation gave millions _after_ Trump had already won. If your criticism is that, then that does not apply to the people signing.

SpicyLemonZest9 hours ago

We shouldn't be scammed by people who intend to get back on the Trump train once they've gotten what they want. But if someone's willing to openly oppose the Trump regime, even out of self-interest, I'm happy to let them feign as much ignorance as they'd like. If his power isn't broken the details of who resisted him when won't matter.

5o1ecist9 hours ago

They control the compute.

xpe9 hours ago

> This is why you can't gatekeep AI capabilities. They will eventually be taken from you by force.

Some form of US AI lab nationalization is possible, but it hasn't happened yet. We'll see. Nationalization can take different forms, not to mention various arrangements well short of it.

I interpret the comment above as a normative claim (what should happen). It implies the nationalization threat forces the decision by the AI labs. No. I will grant it influences, in the sense that AI labs have to account for it.

GaryBluto3 hours ago

If the DoW/DoD wants Anthropic, they'll get Anthropic, whether we know about it publicly or not. It's not unlikely that they're already working together and just putting on a show for the public.

I'd even go as far to say that if this is indeed a publicity campaign it is the most successful one I've seen in years. Many detractors of the existence of LLMs are suddenly leaping to Anthropic's defence.

josfredo3 hours ago

This is the only careful comment. Everything else here is trying to mentally push away the inevitable. You can argue if it is noble to perform resistance in the face of what is pretty much fate, but I would not put any cent on that.

celltalk3 hours ago

Wouldn’t it be ironic if US used open source Chinese models for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight… democracy at its best.

_aavaa_9 hours ago

Yes, take disparate sets of employees and like, oh idk unionize while you still have power.

culi8 hours ago

Actions like these often lead to unions. Look into the history of how the Kickstarter union came to be.

It often starts as collective action in response to a blatant disregard for the values of the workers

sourcegrift5 hours ago

Cute, I will also sign this since there are only upsides of Good optics and no downsides Let me know when any of them resigns after the companies do inevitably take the million dollar contracts.

mitch-flindell9 hours ago

The primary purpose of these products is mass surveillance why else would they be allowed to be built ?

gunnihinn57 minutes ago

The bravery of the people signing this anonymously is inspiring.

rayiner7 hours ago

This seems squarely within the purpose of the Defense Production Act: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Production_Act_of_1950

"Title I authorizes the President to identify specific goods as 'critical and strategic' and to require private businesses to accept and prioritize contracts for these materials."

If you invented a new kind of power source, and the government determined that it could be used to efficiently kill enemies, the government could force you to provide the product to them under the DPA. Why should AI companies get an exemption to that?

yed7 hours ago

Well, for one, they haven’t invoked the Defense Production Act.

rayiner6 hours ago

The very first point on the website is: “The Department of War is threatening to … Invoke the Defense Production Act.”

yed4 hours ago

A few days ago Hegseth threatened two mutually exclusive things: invoking the Defense Production Act or declaring Anthropic a supply chain risk. Today he went with the latter [https://x.com/SecWar/status/2027507717469049070]. That is the main topic now. What they did is basically the exact opposite of invoking the Defense Production Act.

conductr7 hours ago

You can’t be silly enough to build a product that enables things like mass surveillance to proliferate and then try to take a stance of “please don’t use it like that”. You invented a genie and let him out of the bottle.

apublicfrog4 hours ago

They can actually. Hence why they had it in their AUP.

siva71 hour ago

At least they're making it easy for HR.

motbus34 hours ago

The important thing to know is that no one wants a conflict. Don't be used for that. Don't accept that.

We protect our families when we are home. That's all everybody wants.

Quarrel6 hours ago

I know it is a serious topic, but before I clicked on it, I assumed this was going to be about Prime numbers...

Maybe it can get reused after this stuff is over.

mellosouls1 hour ago

"Domestic".

Very disappointing the letter signatories have chosen to reinforce the US-centric idea that using the models to spy on other democracies is fine and dandy.

Altman and senior others names notable by their absence; not unexpected given the quickly following apparent submission to DoW, which leaves the signatories here (while well-intentioned) in exposed ethical positions now.

tomcam6 hours ago

Please take this question at face value. I tend to be slightly pro defense department in this context, but it is not a strongly held belief.

What I have known is that since its very inception, Google has been doing massive amounts of business with the war department. What makes this particular contract different? I really am trying to understand why these sentiments now.

anigbrowl6 hours ago

It's a clear enough moral issue that whichever side of it you end up on is likely to have life-shaping consequences 5 or 10 years down the line. It's predictable that there will be domestic or international conflict with a high cost in lives and political coherence over that timescale, and being someone who 'was in AI' at a government scale vendor is qualitatively different from being a database admin o font designer or UX specialist.

Substantively, individual employees of these firms may have little or no actual impact on this. But AI is ubiquitous enough and disruptive enough that being professionally connected with it at a time of great geopolitical instability has the potential to be a very very bad look later.

bambax1 hour ago

> We hope our leaders will put aside their differences and stand together to continue to refuse the Department of War's current demands...

WTF does that even mean, we "hope"???!? You know they won't, what's the point of hoping? Why not quit if you have the courage, or not quit -- and shut up?

fschuett3 hours ago

Ted Kaczynski was right about technology

abhijitr8 hours ago

The book "On Tyranny: 20 lessons from the 20th century" by the historian Timothy Snyder is an excellent read for these times. The very first lesson is "Do not obey in advance". It's about how authoritarian power often doesn't need to force compliance, people simply bend the knee in anticipation of being forced. This simply emboldens the authoritarians to go further.

I've been disappointed to see many businesses and institutions obeying in advance recently. I hope this moment wakes up the tech community and beyond.

PostOnce10 hours ago

My take is that none of the AI companies really care (companies can't care), they just realize that if they go down that road, public opinion will be so vehemently against AI in all forms that it will be regulated out of viability by the electorate.

Also, if AI exists, AI will be used for war. The AI company employees are kidding themselves if they think otherwise, and yet they are still building it (as opposed to resigning and working on something else), because in the end, money is the only true God in this world.

zugi9 hours ago

Anthropic does not object to its use for war. In fact Anthropic explicitly allows its semi-autonomous use in war, e.g. for identifying targets. They just won't permit its use for full autonomous war, yet, because they don't believe it's safe enough.

PostOnce8 hours ago

Since when has war been waged according to the whim of a corporation?

The tools will be used however the government wants them to be used. The government makes the laws and wages the wars, and the corporation will follow the law whether it wants to or not.

So either you are willing to work on a tool that is not under your control, or you are not.

nxm8 hours ago

I'm sure China doesn't care it's not safe... and there's the issue

foota3 hours ago

Well that aged poorly.

MattDaEskimo10 hours ago

This was a brave, heartwarming read. Thank you to the teams

hedayet6 hours ago

Just one thing - unless you're at a principal level or higher, don't quit as long as your conscience can take it. You'll be replaced by 10 other people overnight.

mythz8 hours ago

These 2 Exceptions shouldn't have to be disputed.

At this point I'd go far to say I wouldn't trust any company with my AI history that caves to DoD demands for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons.

Your AI will know more about you than any other company, not going to be trusting that to anyone who trades ethics for profits.

zahlman5 hours ago

Is there a particular reason why the actual letter content requires JavaScript to load while everything else is readable?

goku122 hours ago

> permission to use our models for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight.

This sounds way worse than dystopian, Orwellian or big-brotherly, in a world where you can't even get a human to review the 'autonomously placed lock' on your email or social media account. The Terminator saga is perhaps a good fit. But I have a feeling that they won't stop even at that.

driverdan8 hours ago

This is a nice gesture but completely meaningless. There is absolutely no commitment in this. "We hope our leaders.." has no conditions, no effects.

If you're an employee and actually believe in this you need to commit to something, like resigning.

culi8 hours ago

it's the first step towards actually organizing. Reminds me of how the Kickstarter union came to be

Any collective action should be encouraged

bcooke10 hours ago

I'd love to see this extended to any American regardless of past/present employment with Google or OpenAI

general_reveal10 hours ago

Would you like to see this extended globally? Could such a spirit exist multinationally? It’s asking a lot, because you’d be asking for a lot of courage from places like China, India, Russia, Middle East … anywhere that’s not Europe basically.

bcooke9 hours ago

Well yes, but context matters here and this is the US government's decision to take with a US-based company.

While I understand why it matters for folks affiliated with prominent AI companies in particular to sign this, the more the American people stand together, the more pressure I think that puts on our government to act responsibly.

Idealistic and naive? Probably. But sometimes grassroots efforts do spark change, and it's high time the people of the USA start living up to the first word in our country's name.

Anyways, to answer your question directly: I welcome all the fine people of the world everywhere to join in what this open letter stands for.

Unfortunately, it's abundantly clear to many of us Americans that the current administration doesn't care what we think, never mind what people outside our country do. So I'll just start with the group that this department (in theory) is supposed to represent.

latencyhawk5 hours ago

Well, I think I will get the 200 sub.

siliconc0w7 hours ago

We need key AI researchers at these companies to speak out - execs will not care otherwise. If Jeff Dean made this a red line, it might matter.

AdieuToLogic7 hours ago

> We need key AI researchers at these companies to speak out ...

See this[0] article from Business Insider dated 2026-02-16 titled:

  The art of the squeal

  What we can learn from the flood of AI resignation letters
And containing:

  This past week brought several additions to the annals of 
  "Why I quit this incredibly valuable company working on 
  bleeding-edge tech" letters, including from researchers at 
  xAI and an op-ed in The New York Times from a departing 
  OpenAI researcher. Perhaps the most unusual was by Mrinank 
  Sharma, who was put in charge of Anthropic's Safeguards 
  Research Team a year ago, and who announced his departure 
  from what is often considered the more safety-minded of the 
  leading AI startups.
0 - https://www.businessinsider.com/resignation-letters-quit-ope...
focusgroup08 hours ago

> domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight

spoiler alert: this is already happening

do labs in China have a choice in the matter?

himata41139 hours ago

Does this mean there is a non zero chance we will get some kind of grok+chinese model mix that's used across the entire US military? Ironic isn't it.

bottlepalm9 hours ago

We all knew AI had the potential to be extremely powerful, and we all perused it anyways. What did we think would happen? The government/military always takes control of the most powerful/dangerous systems. If you work for a defense contractor or under ITAR then you already know this.

The right way to deal with this is political - corporate campaign contributions and lobbying. You're not going to be able to fight the military if they think they need something for national security.

gcanyon10 hours ago

No problem! The DoD^HW will just use DeepSeek!

(I wish this were a joke)

dryarzeg9 hours ago

They've already been using Signal - which is "commercial" app, meaning it's not meant to be used like that - for top-secret (or at least highly sensitive) military communications during the military strikes on Yemen. If that was fake, I apologise, I was deceived. I wouldn't be surprised if things turned out that way again, to be honest. That's something to be expected, actually (IMO).

verdverm9 hours ago

Aren't they using the Israeli version of Signal which backs up messages because the law requires it?

Pretty sure I remember that from the fumble

JshWright9 hours ago

The legal name of the department is still the Department of Defense. The "Department of War" is a preferred name by the administration.

k12sosse9 hours ago

Identity affirming care now includes avoiding the DODs deadname. What a world.

dang7 hours ago

Could you please stop posting unsubstantive comments and flamebait? You've unfortunately been doing it repeatedly. It's not what this site is for, and destroys what it is for.

If you wouldn't mind reviewing https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and taking the intended spirit of the site more to heart, we'd be grateful.

dalemhurley9 hours ago

They are after the models without post training guardrails.

mftb9 hours ago

Stand your ground.

verdverm9 hours ago

Don't tread on me

krapp9 hours ago

Ironically the flag flown mostly by the people who voted for this tyranny.

They should reprint it to say "Step on me Daddy."

verdverm9 hours ago

There's a good one going around with the Anthropic logo replacing the snake

https://bsky.app/profile/verdverm.com/post/3mfuuogxjpk2b

spuz10 hours ago

They should be collecting signatures from employees at xAI. I think they're probably most likely to fill the space left by Anthropic.

dalemhurley9 hours ago

XAI has already announced they are 100% in

https://x.ai/news/us-gov-dept-of-war

spuz9 hours ago

All the more reason to collect their employees' signatures.

aeon_ai9 hours ago

This kind of screams desperation, but I guess that's what happens when you're niche AI.

verdverm9 hours ago

niche is a polite way to put it

actionfromafar9 hours ago

Bot-ique Mechahitler.

ocdtrekkie9 hours ago

Everyone knows anyone who signs this from xAI will be a former employee by tomorrow.

dalemhurley9 hours ago

My guess is their HR is already monitoring it with instant termination processes in place.

spuz9 hours ago

You can sign the form anonymously.

ocdtrekkie9 hours ago

Both the automated verification methods depend on Google servers and Google can almost certainly retrieve that data if they want to regardless of if the signers or verifiers delete it.

ocdtrekkie9 hours ago

You're assuming a lot about Elon's ability to assemble and execute a process competently. They will probably end up hiring people off this list and firing them later.

I think what is much more interesting is what OpenAI and Google will do. There's probably some threshold of signatories where the companies in question do not fire everyone when they decide they want the DoD's business, the question will be how many people have to sign to cross it... and will enough people sign.

I don't think Google would bat an eye at firing 500 people to secure a DoD contract, but would they fire 5,000?

xvector9 hours ago

There is a specific kind of person that joins xAI over the other companies and it is definitely not a moral one.

belter9 hours ago

[dead]

trinsic29 hours ago

I missing the actual letter. I think that part of the content is hidden behind some javascript. Can someone post it.

mortsnort7 hours ago

Kneecapping the country's best AI lab seems like a bad way to win at the cyber.

anonnon7 hours ago

> Signed,

The people who:

> steal any bit of code you put on the internet regardless of the license you use or its terms, then use it to train their models, then turn around and try to sell it to you

> made it so you can't afford new, more powerful computers or smartphones anymore, or perhaps even just replacements for the ones you already have, thanks to massive GPU, DRAM, SSD, and now even HDD shortages

> flood the internet with artificial, superficial content

> aggressively DDoS your website

Real pillars of society.

paganel2 hours ago

Jeff Dean could have done a lot of good and add his name to the list of signatories, seeing as how leaf of AI at Google or some such. He was supposed to be this super-smart dude, I guess he’s far from that.

Huge props for the the Google and OpenAI engineers that did sign this, for those that did realize that they’re fighting for a greater thing, not just for an extra zero or two added at the end of their bank accounts. Especially as they’re taking a great amount of risk by doing it, first of all, imo they are risking their current employment status.

asmor2 hours ago

This is the line? Really?

Not all the other shit this administration has been doing?

God, I hate it here.

ipaddr7 hours ago

And people were wondering how OpenAI will find profitability.

tgv3 hours ago

So now they suddenly develop a conscience? Killing education, and by implication actively dumbing the future world, putting large parts of the labor market at risk, porn fakes, and destroying artistic creation, are acceptable in the name of profit, apparently.

yayr1 day ago

It's good that there are still empathic humans in the decision and build chain when it comes to AI systems...

wosined23 hours ago

[flagged]

dang9 hours ago

Personal attacks aren't allowed here.

Perhaps you don't owe AI tycoons whose names start with A better, but you owe this community better if you're participating in it.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

mrcwinn9 hours ago

I see comments like this all the time on HN, including between community members. Why are you showing up now? Altman may be former YC and friends with Paul Graham, but he’s nevertheless a public figure and does plenty to deserve ridicule.

Are we allowed, for example, to call Trump an insecure man with orange skin and tiny hands? Is that a violation of our allowed speech?

hedayet5 hours ago

Altman is also on Paul Graham's legendary founders list. I hope that clears up a thing or two.

dang7 hours ago

> I see comments like this all the time on HN, including between community members

That's bad, and I'd like to see links to those.

> Why are you showing up now?

If you mean why do I respond to post A but not B, the answer is usually that I saw A but didn't see B. We don't come close to seeing everything that gets posted to HN—there's far too much. If you see a post that ought to have been moderated but hasn't been, the likeliest explanation is that we didn't see it. You can help by flagging it or emailing us at hn@ycombinator.com (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...).

> Are we allowed, for example, to call Trump an insecure man with orange skin and tiny hands?

That's certainly a cliché, and it's hard to see how repetition of tropes fits with the intellectual curiosity that we're optimizing for (or rather, trying to! - https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&sor...). As I've said in the past, curiosity withers under repetition and fries under indignation (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...).

I think, though, that the issue with a political cliché is rather different than posting that someone "doesn't look human".

dmix9 hours ago

Not using Claude only weakens the state. Just don’t oblige

theahura7 hours ago

OpenAI is nothing without its people

ripped_britches8 hours ago

No surprise to have not heard anything from xAI

qup9 hours ago

Hegseth shared a Trump tweet a few hours ago saying they're going to quit doing business with Anthropic.

https://x.com/i/status/2027487514395832410

snickerbockers8 hours ago

>We are the employees of Google and OpenAI, two of the top AI companies in the world.

Does this mean you dipshits are going to stop your own domestic surveillance programs? You sold your souls to the devil decades ago, don't pretend like you have principles now.

jurschreuder3 hours ago

They always already wanted it to be Grok, Grok is the only, what they call "not woke AI".

jfengel17 hours ago

Good luck with that. I just don't see either Google or OpenAI listening to their employees on this. They might have their own reasons for not wanting to help build Skynet, but if they don't, I'm sure those employees can readily be replaced with somebody more compliant.

anigbrowl6 hours ago

We hope our leaders will put aside their differences and stand together to continue to refuse the Department of War's current demands for permission to use our models for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight.

[90 minutes later]

Ah! Well, nevertheless

OK, this is a cheap shot on my part. But still: we hope? What kind of milquetoast martyrdom is this? Nobody gives a shit about tech workers as living, breathing, human moral agents. You (a putative moral actor signed onto this worthy undertaking) might be a person of deep feeling and high principle, and I sincerely admire you for that. But to the world at large, you're an effete button pusher who gets paid mid-six figures to automate society in accordance with billionaires' preferences and your expressions of social piety are about as meaningful as changing the flowers in the window box high up on the side of an ivory tower. The fact that ~80% of the signatories are anonymous only reinforces this perception.

If you want this to be more than a futile gesture followed by structural regret while you actively or passively contribute to whatever technologically-accelerated Bad Things come to pass in the near and medium term, a large proportion of you (> 500/648 current signatories) need to follow through and resign over the weekend. Doing so likely won't have that much direct impact, but it will slow things down a little (for the corporate and governmental bad actors who will find deployment of the new tech a little bit harder) and accelerate opposition a little (market price adjustments of elevated risk, increased debate and public rejection of the militaristic use of AI).

Hope, like other noble feelings, doesn't change anything. Actions, however poorly coordinated and incoherent, change things a little. If your principles are to have meaning, act on them during the short window of attention you have available.

alsufinow2 hours ago

W

paradoxyl4 hours ago

More Far Left treason, documented.

renewiltord8 hours ago

Well, it looks like OpenAI will be working with the Pentagon: https://www.axios.com/2026/02/27/pentagon-openai-safety-red-...

My personal guess is that Sam Altman said he'd let policy violations go without a complaint and Dario Amodei said he wouldn't.

Esophagus47 hours ago

Shame. Although I guess Altman has now fully given up the “for the good of humanity” schtick.

ineedaj0b2 hours ago

really dumb. you don’t win this

ReptileMan5 hours ago

It is really nice to see employees creating lists for the next round of laoffs themselves.

dluan7 hours ago

oops turns out you will all be divided

love2read9 hours ago

How is posting on this website with your full name not career suicide?

ceroxylon9 hours ago

That's what taking a stand looks like... if any of these employees lose their job, they are welcome to come crash at my place for as long as they would like; they will have a roof over their head and I will cook them 3 meals a day.

Sivart139 hours ago

Not all tech employers are total weenies who would refuse to hire someone for taking this stance.

Most are, but not all.

chkaloon6 hours ago

Too late

lazzlazzlazz6 hours ago

The signatories of this site are leaping at a misguided opportunity for moral credit, when the reality is that they're getting whipped into a left-leaning frenzy.

As Undersecretary Jeremy Lewin clarified today[1], these weighty decisions should not be made by activists inside companies, but made by laws and legitimate government.

[1]: https://x.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/2027594072811098230

csneeky6 hours ago

Claude is better for much than GPT atm. You really think the government is going to hamstring the engineering of weapons and intelligence capabilities by not using it?

yoyohello1310 hours ago

I hope Anthropic will survive this. If they don’t it will just be perfect proof that you cannot be both moral and successful in the US.

gslepak9 hours ago

Who cares whether the "company" survives? I've seen this movie. A few of them in fact. We're on the chopping block here, lol.

collinmcnulty9 hours ago

We should care because if they win they empower others to stand up as well, and not just in the area of AI safety. Courage is contagious, and whatever else you think of Anthropic, they’re showing real courage here.

gslepak8 hours ago

I'm not debating whether or not they're being courageous. I'm referring to self-preservation, this is a natural instinct that should be in all people. Have you seen T2? District 9? The Matrix? And a few others I could mention.

dakolli9 hours ago

Yeah, I find it funny how we're now defending these AI companies, when they're clearly still an enemy of the working class.

They've made it incredibly clear their plans are to disenfranchise labor, and welcome in a world of God knows what with their technologies. Like they're making a stand on mass surveillance, this seems a bit like a red herring, cool they stop using their tools for war fighting, but continue to attack their fellow working working class?

All three of these companies are spending hundreds of millions to psyop decision makers across every industry to give your salary to them. Get out of here, with "We will not be divided" OpenAI, Google and Anthropic employees are not friends of labor and should not use our phrases.. or they'd sabotage and or quit.

And why is there no mention of how we caught OpenAI being used in government dashboards through Persona, only two weeks ago, that were directly connected to intelligence organizations and tools to identify if you are politician or high profile personds? OpenAI has been complicit in this since last January when 4o was the first model that qualified for "top secret operations"

(kind of weird how 4o went onto cause a bunch of people to go literally insane and commit crazy acts of violence yet is allowed to be used in the most sensitive aspects of government.. nothing to see here).

hax0ron38 hours ago

If the AI companies and the current administration are both enemies of the working class - I am not necessarily saying that they are, but for the sake of argument let's say that they are - then it probably makes strategic sense for the working class to encourage them to fight each other while supporting the side that is less dangerous. Which side is less dangerous to the working class, I do not know. My point is that there's not necessarily any strategic contradiction between defending the AI companies and supporting the working class.

c1c3r08 hours ago

I look at specific actions in context. What Anthropic did today was amazing in my eyes for reasons that are widely held and stated clearly by Anthropic.

At the same time, I might gesture at other actions they’ve done that fall short. This is not inconsistent; this is simply acknowledging miltidimensionality.

dakolli8 hours ago

Or its just incredible marketing.. I don't really care about what LLMs do in a military context, they'd probably make a military less effective which is good in my opinion. I find it a pretty silly notion to use them outside of maybe signals intelligence, seems actually dumb as hell to use them for targeting. Other types of ML models in a military context worry me far more than neural network powered autocomplete.

I think we should worry way more about Anthropic's attack on the working class, Dario has been very clear those intentions, and we shouldn't be patting them on the back. We should be boycotting all of these companies that say [insert computer i/o career] is dead .

If you must use Think For Me SaaS use an Open Source model.

fourthark10 hours ago

Most survive by bending. See e.g. Google and surveillance a decade ago.

Esophagus47 hours ago

From a revenue perspective I think they’ll be fine, right? Weren’t the value of the govt contracts $200m out of like $14b revenue?

Assuming the govt doesn’t take other crazy measures to punish them.

Aurornis9 hours ago

Anthropic has enough investment money and enough additional investor interest that they can ride this out longer than this administration. It won’t be good for business, of course, but it’s not the end of their world.

> it will just be perfect proof that you cannot be both moral and successful in the US.

I hate this situation as much as anyone, but it’s a unique, first of its kind challenge. I don’t think it’s generalizable to anything. This is a unique situation.

voidfunc9 hours ago

The only way they survive is if their board fires the CEO and they bend the knee. The other option is they are given the green light to sell to one of the US Governments trusted partners: Microsoft/Oracle/X.

jcgrillo9 hours ago

Either way, the bribes will flow like wine, the message has been sent loud and clear

belter10 hours ago

>> you cannot be both moral and successful in the US.

I assumed the use of massive scraped datasets, with copyrighted material and without consent, to train large AI models, had already established this.

drdeca9 hours ago

Many people don’t think there is a moral case against training a model on copyrighted data without obtaining a license to do that specifically.

bko9 hours ago

[flagged]

TehCorwiz9 hours ago

This conflict has zero to do with AI in the grand scheme of things. We had a whole supreme court case about refusing service to customers. Remember that? Private companies can choose which customers to service. And let's be clear about what's being sold. It's not a product that changes hands, it's a service provided continually. And as anyone except the enlisted military troops can, said vendor can choose which efforts to help with. If what the government wants is so onerous as to find no vendors to offer it then that says something doesn't it?

engineer_229 hours ago

Plenty of precedent for seizing private property for national defence. The list is long and growing.

+1
TehCorwiz9 hours ago
GenerWork9 hours ago

Which case is that?

bmelton9 hours ago

Masterpiece Cakeshop v Colorado

https://www.oyez.org/cases/2017/16-111

magicalist9 hours ago

This reads a whole lot like the government gets to make you do whatever it wants because the president was elected?

Freedom!

That's great that responsibility for offensive decisions ultimately lie with the civilian leaders of the military, but that does not give them the right to compel behavior from private citizens under threat of the government obliterating them.

_bohm9 hours ago

This opinion coming from one of the most compromised people possible on this issue, lol.

adampunk9 hours ago

"Seemingly innocuous terms from the latter like "You cannot target innocent civilians" are actually moral minefields that lever differences of cultural tradition into massive control."

GEEEEE, I wonder who the bad guys are here.

bko9 hours ago

Let me introduce you to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea

adampunk9 hours ago

Oooh, scary. Did they shoot Renee Good?

nxobject9 hours ago

Good grief - we happen to have a free market with multiple suppliers. But a defense contractor in deep with the current administration’s ideology might have a hard time remembering that.

harmmonica9 hours ago

A lot of words and somehow still missing the point. This is a pretty straightforward question: should the US government be able to force a company to do business with it based the government's unilateral terms? I think the answer to that ought to be no, they should not be forced. And there's no other discussion to have.

You can discuss whether a corporation is violating some law, and punish them if they are, but I don't think jumping from "corporation doesn't want to do business with the gov" to "corporation is a national security risk" makes any sense.

What a fuckin' joke.

preommr9 hours ago

I agree with Palmer that Corporations shouldn't control governments.

But that's not what this is about. The US government is free to not use Anthropic's services.

The problem is that the government is using bullying tactics against a company excercising it's rights to not sell. Especially if they actually designate Anthropic as a supply chain risk - not only is that threat absolutely ridiculous, but actually doing so should be 9/10 on the danger scale.

WTF is even happening anymore? How did we get here that this is even up for debate???

SpicyLemonZest9 hours ago

Palmer Luckey is excusing the inexcusable for treats from the regime. If the regime gets away with this, when constitutional government is restored, I will be petitioning my congresspeople to destroy Anduril in retaliation.

renewiltord9 hours ago

None of this is relevant. They’re saying “our stuff can’t be used effectively for X but you can use it for Y”. It’s like if someone was saying “dude the o ring is going to fail on the shuttle launch” and you respond “if we have random people permitted to stop the shuttle launch every time we will never get off the ground”.

The rhetorical technique of generalizing a specific constraint is very effective in the peanut gallery but hopefully we don’t want our shuttles to blow up.

SilverElfin9 hours ago

From Palmer Luckey who worshipped Trump as a teenager? Who has billions in contracts due to his sycophancy? Just like Joe Lonsdale and Peter Thiel? Yea his opinion is irrelevant.

mindslight9 hours ago

> Should our military be regulated by our elected leaders

Utterly fallacious. Trump is not a leader, rather he is a divider. Nor was he elected to act as a dictator unbeholden to the Constitution or the courts. Corporate control is indeed terrible, but autocratic authoritarianism is worse. This gradient is shown by how it is only the rare company trying to impart some kind of restraint which is being taken to task.

It's also pretty amazing how no matter which societal institution we try to invoke to put the brakes on the fascists, we're invariably told that the "proper approach" is actually something else, usually settling on simply waiting for an election, some time down the road, maybe. Are we supposed to believe that elections are the only institution our society has? The fascists won a single election, and so we're told that supposedly serves as a mandate for doing whatever they'd like to our country for the next four years? Yeah, no, fuck off.

gjsman-10009 hours ago

[flagged]

ChrisArchitect7 hours ago
HardCodedBias4 hours ago

So much insanity.

Anthropic wanted a veto on use of force by USG. That is intolerable, no private party can have a veto over the sovereign. It is that simple.

Anthropic should have just walked away (and taken the settlement lumps) when they realized that the USG knew. But no, they started some crazy campaign.

This is so irrational on Anthropic. Purchasing managers across the US (and the world) have to understand now that while Anthropic has the best model on the planet, it is not rational (if you prefer it is not rational in ways commonly understood). It is a risk and must be treated as such.

senderista6 hours ago

"We hope our leaders will put aside their differences and stand together"

lovich10 hours ago

You’re kinda already conceding to some of your opponents points when you use legally invalid names like “Department of War”

I appreciate the sentiment but don’t preconcede to your opposition by using their framing.

uniq79 hours ago

In this case I think the opponents made a huge mistake by calling themselves Department of War, and it's something that can be exploited.

Department of Defense was the actual lie, the newspeak term. They were not really defending anything, they were using military power globally for pursuing economic interests. However, it was easy to convince people that the whole endeavor was a good thing, because defending your country against the baddies is good, and you should support anyone doing that (otherwise you'd be a traitor!). Thank you for your service (defending us).

On the other hand, the term Department of War is hard to sell, because most people don't want to participate in a war or support someone who wants to start one. Thank you for your service... invading other countries? killing and raping innocents? ransacking resources?

This is an irrelevant detail, but if I'd read the title "Department of Defense vs. Meta", I'd first think Meta is leaking confidential info to other countries. However, if I'd read "Department of War vs. Meta", I'd think Meta doesn't want to promote an unnecessary war.

Vaslo7 hours ago

"Legally Invalid" lol - what?

lovich2 hours ago

Yeah, it takes an act of Congress to rename a part of the government, normally it’s a milquetoast event like renaming a postal office, but this admin thinks the law doesn’t apply to them.

Currently the government executive branch is claiming they have that right and the legislative branch can get fucked.

I am taking advice from the current executive admin around names and continuing to call the Department of Defense by their biological name.

mulmen9 hours ago

I'm disappointed Anthropic made this mistake as well.

greenranger9 hours ago

[dead]

nullbyte10 hours ago

"He will not divide us!"

leonflexo9 hours ago

What's that, a little speaker?

nom10 hours ago

I miss those times :(

xeonmc10 hours ago

Club Penguin was a gem. Now all we get are Roblox.

blaze9989 hours ago

December 14, 2024

>After famed investor Marc Andreessen met with government officials about the future of tech last May, he was “very scared” and described the meetings as “absolutely horrifying.” These meetings played a key role on why he endorsed Trump, he told journalist Bari Weiss this week on her podcast.

>What scared him most was what some said about the government’s role in AI, and what he described as a young staff who were “radicalized” and “out for blood” and whose policy ideas would be “damaging” to his and Silicon Valley’s interests.

>He walked away believing they endorsed having the government control AI to the point of being market makers, allowing only a couple of companies who cooperated with the government to thrive. He felt they discouraged his investments in AI. “They actually said flat out to us, ‘don't do AI startups like, don't fund AI startups,” he said.

...

keep making petitions, watch the whole thing burn to the ground when Trump decides to channel the Biden ideas in this field.

moogly8 hours ago

We have international laws and rules of war. We have weapon treaties (well, some of them are expiring). Sure, not everyone is signatory, or even follow the conventions they have ratified, but at least having these things in place makes it even remotely possible to categorize and document violations and start processes towards rulebreakers and antihumanist actions.

So I looked into what they cooked up in 2023, plus which countries signed it (scroll down to a link to the actual text). It's an extraordinarily pathetic text. Insulting even.

https://www.state.gov/bureau-of-arms-control-deterrence-and-...

imiric3 hours ago

The levels of irony in this case are staggering.

The employees of these companies are complicit in creating the greatest data harvesting and manipulation machine ever built, whose use cases have yet to be fully realized, yet when the government wants to use it for what governments do best—which was reasonable to expect given the corporate-government symbiosis we've been living in for decades—then it's a step too far?

Give me a fucking break. Stop the performative outrage, and go enjoy the fruits of your labor like the rest of the elites you're destroying the world with.

verdverm9 hours ago

Use the feedback forms within their platforms to let the companies know your thoughts

HWNDUS75 hours ago

Sweet. Looking forward to another CTF season of He Will Not Divide Us.

I love performative acts of wealthy Silicon Valley drags.

fzeroracer9 hours ago

It's rather amusing that this is the proverbial 'red line', not y'know, everything else this administration has been tearing up and running roughshod over. Maybe this would've been less of an issue if companies were more proactive about this bullshit in the first place?

That's why it's hard for me to feel bad about companies suddenly finding themselves on the receiving end. They dug their grave inch by inch and are suddenly surprised when they get shoved into it.

verisimi6 hours ago

It's great that people are taking a moral position re their work, and are seemingly prepared to take a bit of a risk in expressing themselves.

However, if we're honest, Google has a long history of selling 'the people' out on domestic surveillance. There is even a good argument that this is what it was created for in the first place, given it was seeded with money from inqtel, the CIA venture capital fund. So, while I commend acting with your conscience in this (rather minor) case, and I'm glad to see people attempt to draw a line somewhere, what will this really come to? I strongly suspect this is event itself is just theater for the masses, where corporates and their employees get to stand up to government (yay!). The reality is probably all that is being complained about, and far worse, has been going on for years.

How far would these signatories go? Would they be prepared to walk away from all that money? Will they stop the rest of the dystopian coding/legislation writing, or is that stuff still ok (not that evil)?

Ultimately, is gaining the money worth the loss of one's soul? If you know better, and know that it is wrong to assist corporations and governments in cleaving people open for profit and control, but do it anyway for the house, private schools, holidays, Ferrari, only taking a stand in these performative, semi-sanctioned events - is this really the standard you accept for yourself? If so, then no problem. If not, what exactly are you doing the rest of the time? Are you able to switch your morality/heart/soul off? Judge yourself. If you find you are not acting in accord with yourself, everything is already lost.

nilespotter6 hours ago

These models are weapons whether the frontier provider founders and their trite and lofty mission statements like it or not.

Private individuals and private companies do not get to create a defensive weapon with unprecedented power in a new category in the US and not share it with the US military.

You guys are batshit insane.

alfiedotwtf8 hours ago

It would be funny in the end if the only ones left to not say no to Trump were Alibaba

krautburglar8 hours ago

You have 1) stolen everybody's shit and put it behind a paywall, 2) cornered the hardware market in some RICO-worthy offensive that has priced one of the few affordable pasttimes for young people out of reach, 3) changed your climate story (lie) on a dime, and started putting the horrible power-guzzling data centers on any strip of land within spitting distance of a power plant. I hope you all go out of business, and I hope it happens French Revolution style.

Of course they were going to use it for military purposes you spiritual abortions, and there is nothing your keyboard-soft hands can do about it.

duped8 hours ago

The Department of War doesn't exist, don't meet the fascists on their own terms at any level. They don't debate or operate in good faith.

jackblemming9 hours ago

So big tech wants to court Trump with millions in donations and now that the big bully they supported is bullying them.. we’re supposed to feel some kind of sympathy? Am I missing something here? Why did Anthropic get involved with the military in the first place?

nobodywillobsrv4 hours ago

It really feels like I am no longer impressed with Anthropic safety.

Do they have even a basic understanding of the different regimes of safety and what allegiance means to ones own state?

It would be fine to say they are opting out of all forms of protection against adversaries.

But it feels like just more insane naive tech bro stuff.

As someone outside the tech bro bubble in fintech in London, can somebody explain this in a way that doesn't indicate these are sort of kids in a playground who think there is no such thing as the wolf?

Again, opting out and specializing in tech that you are going to provide to your enemies AND friends alike is fine. That is a good specialization. But this is not what I hear. I hear protest songs not deep thinking of thousand year mind set.

remarkEon9 hours ago

This whole episode is very bizarre.

Anthropic appears to be situating themselves where they are set up as the "ethical AI" in the mindspace of, well, anyone paying attention. But I am still trying to figure out where exactly Hegseth, or anyone in DoW, asked Anthropic to conduct illegal domestic spying or launch a system that removes HITL kill chains. Is this all just some big hypothetical that we're all debating (hallucinating)? This[1] appears to be the memo that may (or may not) have caused Hagesth and Dario to go at each other so hard, presumably over this paragraph:

>Clarifying "Responsible Al" at the DoW - Out with Utopian Idealism, In with Hard-Nosed Realism. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and social ideology have no place in the DoW, so we must not employ AI models which incorporate ideological "tuning" that interferes with their ability to provide objectively truthful responses to user prompts. The Department must also utilize models free from usage policy constraints that may limit lawful military applications. Therefore, I direct the CDAO to establish benchmarks for model objectivity as a primary procurement criterion within 90 days, and I direct the Under Secretary of War for Acquisition and Sustainment to incorporate standard "any lawful use" language into any DoW contract through which AI services are procured within 180 days. I also direct the CDAO to.ensure all existing AI policy guidance at the Department aligns with the directives laid out in this memorandum.

So, the "any lawful use" language makes me think that Dario et al have a basket of uses in their minds that they feel should be illegal, but are not currently, and they want to condition further participation in this defense program on not being required to engage in such activity that they deem ought be illegal.

It is no surprise that the government is reacting poorly to this. Without commenting on the ethics of AI-enabled surveillance or non-HITL kill chains, which are fraught, I understand why a department of government charged with making war is uninterested in debating this as terms of the contract itself. Perhaps the best place for that is Congress (good luck), but to remind: the adversary that these people are all thinking about here is PRC, who does not give a single shit about anyone's feelings on whether it's ethical or not to allow a drone system to drop ordinance on it's own.

[1] https://media.defense.gov/2026/Jan/12/2003855671/-1/-1/0/ART...

politician7 hours ago

I simply do not understand why Americans tech companies and their employees will hew and cry about supporting the military. For those of you who support their position, have you ever stopped to consider that your safe, comfortable lives of free speech and protests and TikTok and food and gas and Amazon Next-Day deliveries is enabled by a massive nuclear deterrent operated by the very military you oppose?

It is just so disappointing to come here and read these naive takes. Yes, Anthropic should be compelled to support the military using the DPA if necessary.

rectang3 hours ago

> “I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom that I provide, then questions the manner in which I provide it.”

— Colonel Jessup

dingi6 hours ago

It really shows how far the HN crowd is from reality.

hakrgrl7 hours ago

1.5 hours after this was posted, Sam Altman stated openai will work with the DoW.

So much for this waste of a domain name. https://x.com/sama/status/2027578652477821175

"Tonight, we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network. "

busko7 hours ago
andai5 hours ago

>Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.

I don't get it. Aren't these the same things that Anthropic was trying to negotiate?

Edit: it was explained elsewhere in this thread:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47188473#47190614

nobody_r_knows5 hours ago

Redirect every tweet to x-cancel link: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/xcancelcom-redirect...

Saves you the hastle of visiting that shit-show.

jamiequint5 hours ago

WTF is this garbage site?

nikolay5 hours ago

It's for people who want to read Twitter/X while trying so hard to convince themselves that they don't.

zahlman5 hours ago

> It's for people who want to read

individual posts on Twitter/X without requiring JavaScript and without being fed a sidebar full of algorithmic recommendations.

busko5 hours ago

It's for people who want the context of what's going on here who have neither the time nor stupidity to be on X.

I presume you're on X so no offence to you directly.

TheDong5 hours ago

If you click the '?' link in the upper right it will explain what it does https://xcancel.com/about

esseph5 hours ago

it mirrors what is on x.com

Gigachad7 hours ago

Something doesn’t make sense here. His tweet claims he has exactly the same restrictions that Anthropic had.

skissane6 hours ago

This tweet (from Under Secretary of State Jeremy Lewin) explains it:

https://x.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/2027594072811098230

https://xcancel.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/20275940728110982...

The OpenAI-DoW contract says "all lawful uses", and then reiterates the existing statutory limits on DoW operations. So it basically spells out in more detail what "all lawful uses" actually means under existing law. Of course, I expect it leaves interpreting that law up to the government, and Congress may change that law in the future.

Anthropic wanted to go beyond that. They wanted contractual limitations on those use cases that are stronger than the existing statutory limitations.

OpenAI has essentially agreed to a political fudge in which the Pentagon gets "all lawful uses" along with some ineffective language which sounds like what Anthropic wanted but is actually weaker. Anthropic wasn't willing to accept the fudge.

qdotme6 hours ago

Well, or just the possibility of future-proofing the agreement in favor of the US government, as well as walking back the slippery slope of „no autonomic lethality” and „no mass surveillance”.

The former, grants the Congress the ability to change the definition of all „lawful use” as democratically mandated (if the war is officially declared, if the martial law is officially declared).

The latter, is subtle. There can exist a human responsibility for lethal actions taken by fully autonomous AI - the individual who deploys it, for instance, can be made responsible for the consequences even if each individual „pulling of a trigger” has no human in the loop (Dario’s PoV unacceptable).

Similarly, and less subtly, acceptance of foreign mass surveillance, domestic surveillance (as long as its lawful and not meeting the unlawful mass surveillance limits!) seems to be more in the Pentagon’s favor.

Whether we like it or not, we’re heading into some very unstable time. Anthropic wanted to anchor its performance to stable (maybe stale) social norms, Pentagon wanted to rely on AI provider even as we change those norms.

squarefoot5 hours ago

"All lawful uses" has no meaning when a malignant narcissistic sociopath in power controlled by ruthless rich psychopaths can now rewrite every law at will.

PakG16 hours ago

Because the US government has such a great track record on ensuring that this kind of stuff is only done legally with the utmost integrity. /s

Jensson7 hours ago

Sam probably told them they can renegotiate those restrictions in a year or so when the drama has died down.

patcon6 hours ago

yeah, something shady. i don't trust sam at all.

i once ran into someone in london in 2023 who was doing their thesis on AI regulation. they had essentially ended up doing a case-study on sam. their honest non-academic conclusion (which they shared quietly) was that they were absolutely terrified of sam altman.

fear is one of those signals we ought to listen to more often

m3kw96 hours ago

Is not shady, the systems are not ready for that kind of task esp autonomous hunting. Is smart negotiations, plus Sam would have used the Anthropic situation against them saying you can’t designate all AI top American AI companies supply chain risk etc. it’s complete idiocy the would do that anyways

+1
qdotme5 hours ago
labrador6 hours ago

This is a actaully a government bailout of OpenAI. Investors gave it a bunch of money earlier knowing this was going to happen. Greg Brockman is a major Republican donor for 2026. Nice for OpenAI.

ddtaylor7 hours ago

PR spin/lying while behind closed doors agreeing to it. What's hard to understand about OpenAI lying?

Altman publicly claimed he had no financial stake in OpenAI to emphasize his mission-driven focus. In 2024 it was revealed that Altman personally owned the OpenAI Startup Fund.

In May 2024, actress Scarlett Johansson accused Altman of intentionally mimicking her voice for ChatGPT's "Sky" persona after she had explicitly declined to work with them.

When OpenAI’s aggressive non-disparagement agreements were leaked, which threatened to strip departing employees of all their vested equity (potentially millions of dollars) if they criticized the company, Altman claimed he was unaware of the "provision."

gritspants7 hours ago

My theory is that they both went through normal procurement processes. At some point, one of Palantir's forward deployed sales agents slapped someone's arm at the golph course and said, yes we can automously kill with our AI agents. Anthropic, having little to do with the kind of 'AI' in a use case that made sense for, declined.

jaco67 hours ago

[dead]

straydusk7 hours ago

I know the reaction to this, if you're a rational observer, is "OpenAI have cut corners or made concessions that Anthropic did not, that's the only thing that makes sense."

However, if you live in the US and pay a passing attention to our idiotic politics, you know this is right out of the Trump playbook. It goes like this:

* Make a negotiation personal

* Emotionally lash out and kill the negotiation

* Complete a worse or similar deal, with a worse or similar party

* Celebrate your worse deal as a better deal

Importantly, you must waste enormous time and resources to secure nothing of substance.

That's why I actually believe that OpenAI will meet the same bar Anthropic did, at least for now. Will they continue to, in the same way Anthropic would have? Seems unlikely, but we'll see.

spuz5 hours ago

You're missing an important part of the negotiation - Trump must benefit personally in some way. In this case, Greg Brockman has given by far the biggest single donation ($25m) to Trump's MAGA PAC in September last year.

foobarqux7 hours ago

No, the difference is that the government agrees to no "unlawful" use as determined by the government.

Anthropic said that mass surveillance was per se prohibited even if the government self-certified that it was lawful.

Tadpole91817 hours ago

Well tweets aren't legally binding, so chances are he's just outright lying so they can have their cake (DoD contracts) and eat it too (no bad PR)

jkaplowitz5 hours ago

> Well tweets aren't legally binding

There's nothing in general about a tweet that makes it any more or less legally binding than any other public communication, and they certainly can be used in legally binding ways. But sure, a simple assertion to the public from the CEO of a privately held company about what a separate contract says is not legally binding - whether through tweet, blog, press release, news interview, or any other method.

sudo_cowsay6 hours ago

companies like saying things that makes it look like they aren't doing anything bad but then they decide to do exactly what they said they wouldnt

e.g. google project maven, microsoft hololens (military), and much much more

nurettin5 hours ago

This is so funny to me. Especially since Elon musk had to buy Twitter due to his tweets.

anigbrowl6 hours ago

You really think someone would do that, just go on the internet and tell lies?

https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/just-go-on-the-internet-and-t...

moralestapia7 hours ago

Makes 100% sense.

They said yes to the same thing.

karmasimida7 hours ago

Dario is being ruled out due to ideological standing

Makes perfect sense

nandomrumber5 hours ago

Yep.

Everyone is over thinking it.

There would have been a conversation between Hegseth and Trump that went something like:

This guy thinks he can tell us what we can and can’t do.

Get rid of him.

It’s that simple.

nikolay5 hours ago

He's the reason why many people avoid OpenAI as he is among the top 3 most untrustworthy people in tech!

LPisGood4 hours ago

Who are the other two?

nashashmi5 hours ago

Zuckerberg is number one?

mcs52806 hours ago

Remember when they removed him for not being consistently candid?

jalapenos6 hours ago

And then Microsoft forced him back in on the grounds of: he's a scumbag but he's our scumbag so he's untouchable

RobLach7 hours ago

So all these OpenAI signers are resigning, or...?

jalapenos6 hours ago

Why only have the cake when you can eat it too

dang7 hours ago

Related ongoing thread:

OpenAI agrees with Dept. of War to deploy models in their classified network - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47189650 - Feb 2026 (22 comments)

dataflow7 hours ago

The wording I see is not exactly free of loopholes. I noted them on the other thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47190163

xtracto5 hours ago

When I started reading all these news, the thought that came to my mind is: how sweet of these companies to try this, but unfortunately I am sure that other countries advancing AI like China (deepseek, GLM, etc) or Russia, or whoever WILL have their companies' AI at their disposal

Unfortunately, this is the new arms race, race to the moon, and all that together.

neya6 hours ago

This is not about wars or winning contracts. If you know about Sam's strategies - It's just business. This deal ensures Anthropic doesn't have the financial cushion that OpenAI desperately needs (they just raised billions, also trending on HN). Is it ethical? Probably not. But, all is fair in love and war (proverb).

puchatek5 hours ago

The deal was only possible because anthropic stayed by their convictions. OpenAI didn't have agency in that. You're making it sound like Altman orchestrated the whole thing.

neya4 hours ago

> You're making it sound like Altman orchestrated the whole thing.

Not at all, as a matter of fact I'm just stating what you're stating. It's just business.

jalapenos6 hours ago

Altman is a snake who uses words purely instrumentally, and this is well known.

He basically takes advantage of people's limited memories and default assumption that when a person says something its honest.

ahf8Aithaex7Nai5 hours ago

I dislike the style of Altman's language about as much as I dislike the bullshit language used in politics or the self-incriminating, overly specific denials used by prominent figures to defend themselves against criminal allegations: “I have never had sexual relations with anyone under the age of 18 outside of my own family.”

The language is so coded that the many places where the core statement must be negated stand out like a sore thumb.

chamomeal7 hours ago

Aaaaaand it’s gone

m3kw96 hours ago

Learn to read. “ Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.”

SlightlyLeftPad5 hours ago

Meanwhile, the mass surveillance is outsourced to Flock

SilverElfin6 hours ago

Greg Brockman who cofounded OpenAI is the biggest donor to Trump’s PAC. Altman claims they kept the same restrictions as Anthropic essentially. So my conclusion is OpenAI successfully bribed the government into ditching Anthropic and viciously attacking them by abusing their power (supply chain risk).

Probably the most corrupt way of killing a competitor I’ve heard of.

stinkbeetle7 hours ago

[flagged]

hshdhdhj44447 hours ago

You’re right.

The people who actually know stuff about the world are reality TV stars, Fox News hosts, and podcasters just asking questions.

Those are the people with actual knowledge.

stinkbeetle7 hours ago

Pathetic strawman.

Jimmc4147 hours ago

What else can they do? Would you recommend they stay silent? It sounds like they are no longer the gatekeepers of this technology or they never were to begin with.

stinkbeetle6 hours ago

I would recommend they start by understanding the landscape and developing strategies that are more suited for the actual world as it is, not the naive fantasy land they believe it is.

Coming out publicly playing their hand like it's a royal flush when it's a 7 high and their cards are facing their opponent clearly wasn't going to do anything. The cynical take is they aren't that naive and this just gives them plausible deniability within their social circles when they are interrogated as to why they work for these corporations. But I like to give the benefit of the doubt.

WatermelonApe7 hours ago

[dead]

teaearlgraycold7 hours ago

All they did was say they didn’t want their company to do something. They never said they had the power to ensure that.

stinkbeetle4 hours ago

Being disingenuous isn't a clever or interesting way to discuss a topic though.

senderista6 hours ago

"The world is a complicated, messy, and sometimes dangerous place."

So you better just let the guys with the guns do whatever they want.

busko6 hours ago

Hoorah! shock and awe

mrcwinn7 hours ago

OpenAI employees lol.

You’ve lost utterly and completely. Even if you, as an individual, are a good person.

Jaxon_Varr1 hour ago

[dead]

know-how4 hours ago

[dead]

techreader27 hours ago

[dead]

THESMOKINGUN8 hours ago

[dead]

huflungdung9 hours ago

[dead]

drsalt9 hours ago

[flagged]

paulryanrogers9 hours ago

What makes them appear childish in your view?

kledru10 hours ago

[flagged]

SanjayMehta9 hours ago

To Infinity! And Beyond!

Sorry, I couldn't resist.

kledru2 hours ago

yeah, no problem, I made a lame joke in frustrating situation. I would very much like the petition to have en effect.

civcounter9 hours ago

[flagged]

piskov9 hours ago

[flagged]

nemo44x7 hours ago

Correct. You will not be divided. You will likely be subtracted.

kopirgan8 hours ago

We will not be divided! United in obeying only orders from woke governments, be it on gender ideology, "misinformation", "fact checking" or takedowns, cancellations, blackouts and bans.

charcircuit9 hours ago

Imagine if a gun manufacturer sold a gun that you couldn't use against X or Y country. Private companies imposing such demands on our military should not be respected. Having weapons that can randomly detect a false positive and shut themselves down because they think you are using it wrong is a feature I would never want built in.

I have also been against these terms of services of restricting usage of AI models. It is ridiculous that these private companies get to dictate what I can or can't do with the tools. No other tools work like this. Every other tools is going to be governed by the legal system which the people of the country have established.

dlev_pika8 hours ago

It sounds like you think that Anthropic is the first company regulating the use of their product. This is not a novelty whatsoever.

charcircuit8 hours ago

No, but I find it obnoxious as an end user.

Esophagus47 hours ago

Then don’t create a mass surveillance program on Americans and you shouldn’t have to worry about it ;)

charcircuit7 hours ago

Have you not read the Usage Policy that regular people have to follow? For example, you are not allowed to use their API to automatically summarize your blog post and share the link on X as you are not allowed to make posts automatically.

hparadiz8 hours ago

These models will be able to run on a machine in your pocket locally within a few decades.

bcooke8 hours ago

Taking principled stands should absolutely be respected.

charcircuit8 hours ago

I can respect a stance while simultaneously calling out how much I dislike it.

WorkerBee284748 hours ago

> Imagine if a gun manufacturer sold a gun that you couldn't use against X or Y country

That kind of happens with F35s that the US sells to its allies.

joshuamorton8 hours ago

> Imagine if a gun manufacturer sold a gun that you couldn't use against X or Y country.

The point here, of course, being that Anthropic is very specifically claiming to not be a gun manufacturer, and Hegseth's response is that the DoD (W?) will force anthropic to build guns.

hakrgrl8 hours ago

How cute they bought a domain and everything

infamouscow10 hours ago

[flagged]

hax0ron38 hours ago

>The executive branch can categorize AI technology as equivalent to nuclear weapons technology.

Theoretically, but this would run the risk of collapsing the US tech sector, which at this point is a significant part of the strength of the US economy, and thus making it likely that the Republicans will lose power in the next elections.

tomhow9 hours ago

Please don't fulminate on HN. The guidelines make it clear we're trying for something better here. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

angusik5 hours ago

I'm here to support Pentagon (: