
The Pentagon said on Friday it had reached agreements with seven AI companies to deploy their advanced capabilities on the Defense Department’s classified networks as it seeks to diversify the range of AI companies working across the military. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. The statement notably excludes Anthropic, which has been in dispute with the Pentagon over guardrails for how the military could use its artificial intelligence tools.
Main Idea: The Pentagon reached new agreements with leading AI companies, including OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft, to bring their tools onto classified military networks.
Key Points:
Pentagon use of OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft systems on classified networks could raise privacy and security risks if the tools are misused or breached.
Wider AI use in defense could improve government speed and efficiency, which may lower costs and improve services if the systems work well.
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Named among the companies reached by the Pentagon and separately reported as signing a classified-work deal.
Named as one of the AI companies being integrated into Pentagon network environments.
Named as one of the AI companies being integrated into Pentagon network environments.
One of the seven AI companies named in the Pentagon’s agreements and a major focus of the story.
Central counterpoint in the story because it is excluded from the Pentagon agreements and is in dispute with.
Defense Department CTO quoted explaining the Pentagon’s stance on Anthropic and its model.
Named as one of the seven AI companies working with the Pentagon on classified networks.
Named president whose comments about Anthropic are part of the article’s context.
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Sign in to commentAnthropic’s named AI model discussed as part of the dispute and national-security concern.