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Source: the White House is unlikely to extend export restrictions to other AI companies

Leo Schwartz /The Information:

The Information Leo Schwartz

Discussion

  • @semaforben Ben Smith on x
    Extent to which White House allies are signaling that this is a culture war issue, not a technical one, is striking
  • @signulll @signulll on x
    contrary to the default reaction on this little website, this is absolutely incredible news for anthropic. i mean obviously yes, the operational disruption is real. but public & world perception wise, this could not be a bigger home run. could be a grand slam type situation.
  • @luke_metro @luke_metro on x
    spare your AI models from export control restrictions with this one weird trick [image]
  • r/neoliberal r on reddit
    How Amazon and the White House ended Anthropic's Fable
  • @natolambert Nathan Lambert on x
    The only reasonable expectation if you're a fan of open weight models is that if there's a major step in chinese open-weight performance, there's a good chance the whole chinese llm sphere is banned. National security apparatus will happily give a big “fuck you” to open models.
  • @natolambert Nathan Lambert on x
    Threading the needle in this post of anthropic has done some bad things for AI governance & the discourse but the actions of this administration are way worse so we need to get a handle on it before stronger models, open or closed, come along soon. https://www.interconnects.ai/ .…
  • @natolambert Nathan Lambert on x
    Recent events are so heavy bc that this feels like a start of a new tumultuous era rather than a one & done policy calibration. It's clearer we need an open ecosystem, but powerful models are coming that could cause strong reactions (or bans) with no champion to defend them.
  • @deanwball Dean W. Ball on x
    Make no mistake: post-Mythos, the United States has a licensing regime for AI. It's just informal, with no consistent rules or firm boundaries on state power or public transparency. Cobalt mining in the Congo is vastly more institutionalized than frontier AI licensing in the US.
  • @deredleritt3r Prinz on x
    @deanwball We also apparently have unwritten rules that frontier models can't be trained outside the U.S. This state of affairs probably won't persist for long, and it will probably be up to this administration and the upcoming edition of Congress to enshrine an actual written le…