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“Judge Halts Pentagon’s Blacklisting of Anthropic AI”

A United States judge has temporarily halted the Pentagon’s blacklisting of Anthropic, marking a significant development in the company’s ongoing dispute with the military regarding AI safety in combat situations. The legal battle, taking place in a California federal court, centers on Anthropic’s assertion that U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth exceeded his authority by categorizing Anthropic as a national security supply-chain risk. This classification is typically assigned to companies that could potentially expose military systems to infiltration or sabotage by adversaries.

Anthropic argues that the government’s actions infringed upon its First Amendment rights to free speech and its Fifth Amendment right to due process, claiming it was not afforded an opportunity to challenge the designation. U.S. District Judge Rita Lin, appointed by former President Joe Biden, concurred with Anthropic’s arguments in a 43-page ruling. However, the ruling’s enforcement has been delayed for seven days to allow the administration to potentially appeal the decision.

The dispute escalated following Anthropic’s objection to the military’s proposal to utilize its AI chatbot, Claude, in U.S. surveillance or autonomous weapons systems. This objection led to Hegseth’s unprecedented decision to block Anthropic from certain military contracts, a move that Anthropic executives fear could result in significant financial losses and damage to the company’s reputation.

Anthropic asserts that AI models are not yet sufficiently reliable for use in autonomous weapons and opposes domestic surveillance on the grounds of rights violations. While the Pentagon argues that private entities should not dictate military operations, it clarifies that it has no intention of using AI technology for the purposes challenged by Anthropic.

In her ruling, Judge Lin cast doubt on the government’s motives, suggesting that Anthropic may be facing punitive measures for publicly criticizing the government’s contracting stance. Anthropic’s spokesperson, Danielle Cohen, expressed satisfaction with the court’s decision and emphasized the company’s commitment to collaborating with the government to ensure the safe and beneficial application of AI technology for all Americans.

Anthropic’s designation as a supply-chain risk under a government-procurement statute represents the first public labeling of a U.S. company under this statute aimed at safeguarding military systems from foreign sabotage. The company’s legal action contends that the designation was unlawful, unfounded, and inconsistent with previous commendations of Claude by the military.

The Justice Department countered by warning that Anthropic’s stance could introduce uncertainty into Pentagon operations involving Claude and potentially compromise military systems during critical missions. The government maintains that the designation was prompted by Anthropic’s refusal to comply with contractual terms rather than its stance on AI safety.

Additionally, Anthropic faces another legal challenge in Washington concerning a separate Pentagon supply-chain risk designation that might result in its exclusion from civilian government contracts.

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