Anthropic says the Pentagon is "seeking to destroy the economic value created by one of the world’s fastest-growing private companies."
The president doesn't think too highly of dogs... or Anthropic.
"The future of American innovation in AI, the rule of law, and the constitutional boundaries of executive power are all on the line, and they are yours to defend."
"The machinery of our current republic seems to be in such disrepair that it is hard to see how it lasts," writes Dean Ball.
Critics are worried OpenAI's technology will be used for mass surveillance and fully autonomous military strikes.
You don't need to worry about AI taking your job during a nuclear apocalypse.
Bravely taking a position that won't get tested.
Launching missiles for defense is fine, apparently.
Taking a hit for upholding safeguards probably isn't the worst thing for your reputation.
"We will win this race by becoming an AI-first war-fighting force across all domains," the Defense Secretary said Monday.
Take that, enemies of the United States.
"We are pushing all of our chips in on artificial intelligence as a fighting force," Hegseth said.
Alex Karp vows to use his "whole influence" on immigration and defense policy.
Republicans are already spinning the report as a "nothing burger."
Even Republicans are calling for an investigation.
"All good. Thank God. Continue mission!" Hegseth tweeted.
You read that right. The second one.
A new report suggests that OSINT accounts on social media may play a role when it comes to who the U.S. decides to kill.
Laura Loomer appeared to take credit for the ouster.
Pete Hegseth's headaches continue.