‘Find a way to work together’ — Sam Altman’s message to the Department of Defense and Anthropic | Tech Radar
Overview
News, deals, reviews, guides and more on the newest smartphones
News, deals, reviews, guides and more on the newest computing gadgets
Details
Start exploring exclusive deals, expert advice and more
Unlock and manage exclusive Techradar member rewards.
‘Find a way to work together’ — Sam Altman’s message to the Department of Defense and Anthropic
Altman weighs in on why AI companies can’t afford to keep escalating their fights with government
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
Unlock instant access to exclusive member features.
Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.
Sam Altman urged the government and Anthropic to de-escalate tensions and work together on AI governance
He argued that governments should hold power over AI and national security decisions
He said he still mostly trusts the government, while accepting that many don't
Relations between Anthropic and the U. S. government have become an unusually combustible flashpoint in the broader fight over AI regulations and control. The escalating fight began when negotiations with the Pentagon over how Anthropic’s Claude AI model could be used broke down over the company's refusal to remove safeguards against fully autonomous weapons or mass domestic surveillance.
Responses from Washington, including an executive directive banning federal agencies from using Anthropic’s technology and labeling the company a “supply chain risk,” led to lawsuits alleging constitutional violations, and a federal judge has since temporarily blocked the Pentagon’s actions.
Open AI CEO Sam Altman apparently sees harmony as necessary on both ends of the argument.
Altman defends Chat GPT's safety against Musk accusations
Anthropic’s Super Bowl ad trolled Open AI and Sam Altman is fuming
Sam Altman regrets rushed defense deal as Chat GPT uninstalls surge by 295%
"Find a way to work together. like stop, stop the stuff on both, stop the escalation on both sides and find a way to work together," Altman said in an interview with Laurie Segall.
Sam Altman, CEO of Open AI. (Image credit: Getty Images/Bloomberg)
AI companies have hyped the technology's potential in realms like national security, even as they lobby for a light regulatory touch. Altman has apparently concluded that the companies cannot have it both ways. If AI is as geopolitically consequential as everyone keeps insisting, then governments are going to want a hand on the wheel.
"I don't think it works for our industry to say, Hey, this is the most powerful technology humanity has ever built," Altman said. "It is going to be the high order bit in geopolitics. It is going to be the greatest cyber weapon the world has ever built. It is going to, you know, be the determinant of future wars and protection. And we are not giving it to you."
Of course, whether people feel comfortable with the government controlling such consequential technology is another question. Altman said he still mostly trusts the system of checks and balances, though he did acknowledge that many people currently “really don’t trust the government to follow the law.”
It's a position that stands out compared to some AI leaders who are more suspicious of the government. Nonetheless, he thinks it would be a mistake not to help the government with national security, especially in cyber infrastructure.
"I think we have to work with government, but the intensity of the current mood of mistrust, I was miscalibrated on and I understand something there now," he said.
Essentially, Altman and others aligned with him want to work with governments, even as the public distrust over the misuse of AI grows.
Trump just banned Anthropic from government use — this is how we got here
'Straight up lies': Anthropic CEO attacks Open AI's US military deal
Sam Altman issues stark warning as $1 billion plan is revealed
"One of the most important questions the world will have to answer in the next year is, are AI companies or are governments more powerful? And I think it's very important that the governments are more powerful," Altman said. "The future of the world, and the decisions about the most important elements of national security should be made through a democratically elected process. And the people that have been appointed as part of that process, not me, and not the CEO of some other lab."
Altman kept coming back to the issue of the way the power of AI is arriving faster than institutions, governments, or most humans can calibrate for it. The systems are getting more capable, and their potential for misuse grows in tandem.
The stakes are higher and more serious all the time. Big fights among those who are supposed to devise safe regulations and the companies, at least theoretically, trying to steer the technology in an ethical direction, represent an enormous problem.
A diplomatic shrug urging diametrically opposed sides to “find a way to work together” won't likely resolve matters. Still, at least it means Altman knows the answer won't be obvious, even if he phrased it as a request to Chat GPT.
Follow Tech Radar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course you can also follow Tech Radar on Tik Tok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on Whats App too.
Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for Tech Radar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as Open AI’s Chat GPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
1NYT Strands hints and answers for Tuesday, April 7 (game #765)
2 Quordle hints and answers for Tuesday, April 7 (game #1534)
3NYT Connections hints and answers for Tuesday, April 7 (game #1031)
4 Artemis II got me thinking about space — then I found Lego's surprisingly interactive set
5 Google warns quantum computers could break Bitcoin encryption much sooner than expected
Tech Radar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.
Key Takeaways
- News, deals, reviews, guides and more on the newest smartphones
- News, deals, reviews, guides and more on the newest computing gadgets
- Start exploring exclusive deals, expert advice and more
- Unlock and manage exclusive Techradar member rewards
-
‘Find a way to work together’ — Sam Altman’s message to the Department of Defense and Anthropic



