
The U.S. government is allowing Anthropic to deploy its Mythos 5 model to a select group of customers and partners, according to a letter from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to Anthropic that was seen by NBC News. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. In the letter, Lutnick wrote that the government was confident in the guardrails Anthropic had put in place to allow trusted users to access the powerful AI system.
Main Idea: The U.S. government has let Anthropic restore limited access to its Mythos 5 AI model for a small group of trusted users after pulling it offline over national security concerns.
Key Points:
Limited access to Anthropic’s strongest AI may delay new tools for workers, businesses, and cyber defenders, while the safety rules show public risk remains a concern.
Government-approved use of Mythos 5 could help protect critical infrastructure and reduce cyberattacks that can hurt households, hospitals, and small businesses.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central company whose AI model access is being restricted and partially restored.
Commerce Secretary who issued the letter and drove the government action in the story.
Federal agency involved in the export-control action affecting Anthropic’s model access.
Major competitor whose phased model release is used as a key comparison point in the article.
Named president whose executive order and administration policy frame the government’s AI oversight approach.
Sovereign government acting through export-control and national-security decisions in the article.
Named partner organization previously involved in Anthropic’s trusted-access program.
Named bank partner previously granted access to Anthropic’s model in the article.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentGovernment office involved in talks with Anthropic about restoring access while managing cyber risk.