Trump Administration Blacklists Anthropic Over Refusal to Support Military Surveillance and Autonomous Weapons
The Trump administration has severed ties with Anthropic and invoked national security laws to blacklist the AI company after it refused to allow its technology for mass surveillance of U.S. citizens or autonomous armed drones. MIT physicist Max Tegmark argues that Anthropic and other AI companies have created their own predicament by resisting binding safety regulation while breaking their voluntary safety commitments. The incident highlights the regulatory vacuum in AI development and raises questions about whether other AI companies will stand with Anthropic or compete for the Pentagon contract.
Skynet Chance (+0.04%): The article reveals that major AI companies are abandoning safety commitments and the regulatory vacuum allows development of autonomous weapons systems without safeguards, increasing loss-of-control risks. However, Anthropic's resistance to military applications and the public debate it sparked provide some countervailing pressure against unconstrained AI weaponization.
Skynet Date (-1 days): The competitive pressure created by Anthropic's blacklisting may accelerate other companies' willingness to develop uncontrolled military AI applications, and the abandonment of safety commitments across the industry suggests faster deployment of potentially dangerous systems. The regulatory vacuum means no institutional brakes exist on this acceleration.
AGI Progress (+0.03%): Tegmark's analysis reveals rapid AGI progress, with GPT-4 at 27% and GPT-5 at 57% completion according to rigorous AGI definitions, and AI already achieving gold medal performance at the International Mathematics Olympiad. The article confirms expert predictions from six years ago about human-level language mastery were drastically wrong, indicating faster-than-expected capability growth.
AGI Date (-1 days): The doubling of AGI completion metrics from GPT-4 to GPT-5 in a short timeframe, combined with Tegmark's warning to MIT students that they may not find jobs in four years due to AGI, suggests significant acceleration toward AGI. The competitive dynamics and lack of regulation removing friction from development further accelerate the timeline.