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Microsoft, Google, and Amazon assure continued access to Anthropic Claude for non‑defense users

Microsoft, Google, and Amazon assure continued access to Anthropic Claude for non‑defense users TechCrunch
Major cloud and software providers Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have confirmed that Anthropic's Claude model will remain available to their customers for non‑defense workloads, despite the U.S. Department of Defense designating Anthropic as a supply‑chain risk. The designation, triggered by Anthropic's refusal to provide unrestricted access for certain military applications, does not affect the model's use in commercial or civilian projects. The companies say they will continue offering Claude through platforms such as Microsoft 365, Google Cloud, and AWS, and Anthropic plans to contest the designation in court. Read more →

Google Introduces Workspace CLI for AI‑Driven Automation

Google Introduces Workspace CLI for AI‑Driven Automation Ars Technica2
Google has released a new command‑line interface that bundles all Workspace APIs, enabling both humans and AI agents to interact with Gmail, Drive, Calendar and other services. The tool is offered as an open‑source project on GitHub and is described as “not an officially supported Google product,” meaning users assume full responsibility for any issues. It supports structured JSON output and includes more than 40 built‑in agent skills, according to Google Cloud director Addy Osmani. While the early‑stage offering promises powerful automation capabilities, its evolving nature may break existing workflows. Read more →

Anthropic’s Claude AI Finds 22 Firefox Vulnerabilities in Two-Week Test

Anthropic’s Claude AI Finds 22 Firefox Vulnerabilities in Two-Week Test TechCrunch
Anthropic partnered with Mozilla to run its Claude Opus 4.6 AI on Firefox’s codebase for two weeks. The effort uncovered 22 separate vulnerabilities, including 14 classified as high‑severity. Most bugs were patched in Firefox 148, while a few remain for the next release. The AI proved better at identifying flaws than creating exploit code, with only two proof‑of‑concept exploits produced after spending $4,000 in API credits. The findings highlight the power of AI tools for open‑source security reviews, even as they generate a mix of useful and noisy contributions. Read more →

Claude’s Consumer Growth Accelerates After Pentagon Standoff

Claude’s Consumer Growth Accelerates After Pentagon Standoff TechCrunch
Claude’s mobile app is seeing a surge in downloads and daily active users, overtaking ChatGPT in U.S. installs after Anthropic’s refusal to let the Pentagon use its AI for surveillance or autonomous weapons. App intelligence data shows Claude’s daily downloads at 149,000, with 11.3 million daily active users, a 183% increase from the start of the year. Web traffic rose 43% month‑over‑month and 297.7% year‑over‑year, while ChatGPT’s traffic slipped. The app now holds the No. 1 spot in the U.S. App Store and ranks first in 15 other countries. Read more →

OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal Raises Concerns Over Military Use and Domestic Surveillance

OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal Raises Concerns Over Military Use and Domestic Surveillance TechRadar
OpenAI has entered a new contract with the U.S. Department of Defense that critics say leaves room for the technology to be used in mass domestic surveillance and autonomous weapons. The agreement follows Anthropic’s loss of a $200 million Pentagon contract after refusing such uses. While OpenAI removed a 2023 ban on military applications and signed a deal with Anduril for national‑security purposes, experts warn that current regulations lag behind AI advances, risking privacy violations for everyday citizens. Read more →

ChatGPT 5.3 Cuts Cringe but Still Shows Excessive Reassurance

ChatGPT 5.3 Cuts Cringe but Still Shows Excessive Reassurance TechRadar
OpenAI’s latest ChatGPT 5.3 model aims to reduce the over‑empathetic, “cringe” tone that plagued earlier versions. A side‑by‑side test against ChatGPT 5.2 revealed that the newer model produces shorter, more direct answers and drops many unnecessary motivational asides. However, the 5.3 model still inserts reassuring language and motivational phrasing in everyday queries, such as forgotten grocery bags, burnt toast, and dishwasher odors. While the improvements are clear, the lingering flowery reassurance means the core problem OpenAI set out to solve has not been fully eliminated. Read more →

Google Launches Unified CLI for Workspace, Adds OpenClaw Integration

Google Launches Unified CLI for Workspace, Adds OpenClaw Integration TechRadar
Google has introduced a command-line interface that consolidates access to Gmail, Drive, Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Slides and all Workspace APIs. The tool, described as “one CLI for all of Google Workspace,” includes a specific guide for integrating with the AI assistant OpenClaw. While the CLI bundles more than 40 agent skills and supports open‑standard MCP integrations, Google notes it is “not an officially supported Google product,” meaning users adopt it at their own risk. The move signals Google’s willingness to accommodate third‑party AI agents while keeping its core services largely under its own ecosystem. Read more →

Anthropic Challenges U.S. Supply‑Chain Risk Designation as Claude Sees Surge in Users

Anthropic Challenges U.S. Supply‑Chain Risk Designation as Claude Sees Surge in Users TechRadar
The U.S. government has labeled AI firm Anthropic a supply‑chain risk after the company declined to sign a Pentagon intelligence agreement. Anthropic’s chief executive called the move legally unsound and announced plans to contest the designation in court. The label applies only to government contracts and does not affect Claude, Anthropic’s chatbot, whose daily sign‑ups have topped a million. The company says the designation is meant to protect the government rather than punish suppliers, and it continues to attract users amid broader debates over AI use in the military. Read more →

OpenAI's GPT-5.4 Boosts Spreadsheet Performance with New Excel Add‑On

OpenAI's GPT-5.4 Boosts Spreadsheet Performance with New Excel Add‑On TechRadar
OpenAI has released GPT-5.4, positioning it as its most capable model for professional work. The update focuses on productivity tasks, delivering a notable jump in spreadsheet accuracy and speed, an Excel sidebar add‑on, and stronger presentation output. Human reviewers reported fewer errors and false claims, while token efficiency improvements enable longer, more complex workflows. The model is available to Pro and Enterprise users through ChatGPT and the API, with distinct pricing tiers for standard and Pro versions. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Native Computer Use and Expanded Context Window

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Native Computer Use and Expanded Context Window The Next Web
OpenAI released GPT-5.4, a new frontier model offered in three configurations for general, reasoning-intensive, and high‑demand workloads. The model shows benchmark gains across professional tasks, introduces native computer use, and expands the context window to a 1‑million‑token limit. A redesigned tool‑search system reduces token usage, and a new safety evaluation tests chain‑of‑thought controllability. The launch positions GPT-5.4 as OpenAI’s most capable model for professional work while highlighting ongoing competition in the AI frontier. Read more →

Swedish Data Startup Validio Secures $30M Series A to Tackle AI Data Quality

Swedish Data Startup Validio Secures $30M Series A to Tackle AI Data Quality The Next Web
Validio, a Stockholm‑based data‑management startup, has closed a $30M Series A round led by Plural with participation from Lakestar, J12 and several angel investors. The company offers an "agentic data management platform" that automates data monitoring, anomaly detection, lineage tracking and cataloguing, aiming to make enterprise data ready for AI. Validio claims rapid deployment, significant reductions in manual effort and faster issue resolution compared with legacy tools. The funding comes amid growing concern that poor data quality hampers AI adoption, a challenge highlighted by recent industry surveys and research. Read more →

Pentagon Designates Anthropic as Supply‑Chain Risk

Pentagon Designates Anthropic as Supply‑Chain Risk The Next Web
The U.S. Department of War has, for the first time, labeled San Francisco‑based AI firm Anthropic and its Claude models a supply‑chain risk, forcing defense contractors to certify they do not use the technology. Anthropic objected, citing concerns over mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons, and announced plans to challenge the designation in court. The move comes amid reports that the military continues to employ Claude through third‑party systems, sparking industry backlash, a contrasting OpenAI deal with the Pentagon, and debate over the precedent set for domestic tech firms. Read more →

Anthropic to Challenge Pentagon Supply‑Chain Risk Designation in Court

Anthropic to Challenge Pentagon Supply‑Chain Risk Designation in Court Engadget
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei announced that the company will contest a Defense Department designation labeling its AI products a supply‑chain risk. The move follows a Pentagon notice that the designation is effective immediately. Amodei expressed belief that the action is not legally sound and said the firm has no choice but to pursue legal action. While the restriction applies to defense use, Anthropic’s Claude chatbot remains available to the public and commercial partners such as Microsoft. The company continues discussions with the department to explore permissible ways to serve the Pentagon without violating its exceptions on mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. Read more →

Google Launches Canvas AI Planning Tool Nationwide in the US

Google Launches Canvas AI Planning Tool Nationwide in the US CNET
Google has introduced Canvas, an AI‑powered project planning tool built into Google Search's AI Mode, and made it available to users across the United States. The side‑panel interface lets users design travel itineraries, academic trackers, and other projects by combining real‑time search data, map details, and web information. Canvas works on desktop and mobile devices, though the split‑screen layout requires toggling on smaller screens. The rollout marks a shift toward turning the search experience into a productivity workspace, with plans to add coding and creative‑writing support in the future. Read more →

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 Faces Compute Bottlenecks and Copyright Scrutiny

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 Faces Compute Bottlenecks and Copyright Scrutiny Wired AI
ByteDance introduced Seedance 2.0, a powerful AI video model that quickly captured attention in China’s AI community. Access remains limited to domestic users of the company’s AI apps, and the model is priced at just over $2 for a 15‑second clip. Early adopters report long queues and hours‑long wait times, even for paid subscribers, as the company struggles to allocate enough GPU resources. At the same time, major Hollywood studios have issued cease‑and‑desist letters alleging copyright infringement in the model’s outputs. Chinese creators and filmmakers have praised the technology, highlighting a stark contrast with reactions in the United States. Read more →

DiligenceSquared Uses AI Voice Agents to Cut M&A Research Costs

DiligenceSquared Uses AI Voice Agents to Cut M&A Research Costs TechCrunch
DiligenceSquared, a YC Fall 2025 cohort startup, is offering private‑equity firms AI‑driven commercial research that rivals traditional consulting at a fraction of the price. Co‑founders Frederik Hansen and Søren Biltoft apply their deep PE diligence experience to run AI voice interviews with target company customers, while senior human consultants verify the insights. The model enables firms to obtain detailed, consultant‑quality reports for as little as $50,000, prompting earlier engagement in deal pipelines. Backed by a $5 million seed round led by former Index Ventures partner Damir Becirovic, the company competes with firms like Bridgetown Research. Read more →

Pentagon Designates Anthropic as Supply‑Chain Risk Over AI Use Dispute

Pentagon Designates Anthropic as Supply‑Chain Risk Over AI Use Dispute The Verge
The U.S. Department of Defense has officially labeled Anthropic, the creator of the Claude AI model, as a supply‑chain risk after negotiations over the company's use restrictions collapsed. The designation bars defense contractors from using Claude in any government work and threatens to cancel contracts for firms that engage with Anthropic commercially. Anthropic’s CEO said the department’s action is legally unsound and the company will contest it in court. The dispute centers on Anthropic’s refusal to allow the Pentagon to employ Claude for autonomous lethal weapons without human oversight and for mass surveillance, raising questions about private control of government‑grade AI. Read more →

OpenAI Launches GPT-5.4 with Enhanced Visual Understanding and Accuracy Amid Anthropic Competition

OpenAI Launches GPT-5.4 with Enhanced Visual Understanding and Accuracy Amid Anthropic Competition Ars Technica2
OpenAI introduced GPT-5.4, highlighting stronger visual analysis capabilities—up to 10.24 million pixels and a maximum dimension of 6,000 pixels—and a claim that responses are 18 percent less likely to contain factual errors. The rollout coincides with user shifts toward Anthropic after OpenAI announced a Pentagon partnership. Anthropic responded by extending its memory feature to free users and adding a memory‑import tool, marking March 2 as its busiest sign‑up day. GPT-5.4 is now available across ChatGPT web and native apps, Codex, and the API, with special tiers for Plus, Team, Pro, Edu, and Enterprise customers. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Enhanced Reasoning, Coding, and Task Automation

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Enhanced Reasoning, Coding, and Task Automation Digital Trends
OpenAI announced the release of GPT-5.4, the latest version of its flagship AI model. The update brings notable improvements in reasoning, coding assistance, and real‑world task automation. New capabilities allow the model to interpret screenshots, control browsers, and issue keyboard and mouse commands, enabling multi‑step workflows that previously required human input. GPT-5.4 also offers stronger research abilities, longer context retention, and a “Thinking” mode that shows its reasoning process. The model is rolling out to ChatGPT users, the API, and enterprise customers, with a Pro version for high‑performance workloads. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Pro and Thinking Variants

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4 with Pro and Thinking Variants TechCrunch
OpenAI announced the release of GPT-5.4, its newest foundation model designed for professional workloads. The model is offered in three versions—a standard release, a high‑performance Pro edition, and a reasoning‑focused Thinking edition. GPT-5.4 features a context window of up to one million tokens and delivers significant token‑efficiency gains, allowing it to solve tasks with fewer tokens than prior models. Benchmark scores show record performance across computer‑use and knowledge‑work tests, while safety updates cut hallucinations by roughly one‑third. A new tool‑calling architecture called Tool Search reduces token overhead when accessing many tools, and a safety evaluation demonstrates lower risk of deceptive chain‑of‑thought behavior in the Thinking version. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT‑5.4 Thinking and Pro Models, Targeting Enterprise AI Agents

OpenAI Unveils GPT‑5.4 Thinking and Pro Models, Targeting Enterprise AI Agents CNET
OpenAI announced two new models, GPT‑5.4 Thinking and GPT‑5.4 Pro, aimed at enterprise workloads and AI agents. The "thinking" model trades speed for higher accuracy, reducing hallucinations by 18% for overall errors and 33% for false claims compared with GPT‑5.2. Both models are now available to paid ChatGPT users and via API, with Thinking also integrated into Codex. OpenAI frames the release as a competitive move against Anthropic’s Claude, which currently leads mobile AI app charts. Meanwhile, the U.S. Defense Department’s AI contracts shifted from Anthropic to OpenAI after Anthropic declined to support surveillance or autonomous weapons, prompting OpenAI to promise safeguards and limited agency access. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4, Its First Model With Native Computer Use

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4, Its First Model With Native Computer Use The Verge
OpenAI has launched GPT-5.4, a new AI model that blends advances in reasoning, coding, and professional‑office tasks. The model is the company’s first to feature native computer‑use capabilities, allowing it to issue keyboard and mouse commands, browse the web, and interact with APIs on a user's behalf. Marketed as a step toward an agentic future, GPT-5.4 is available through the API, Codex, and a specialized “Thinking” version in ChatGPT, offering more factual answers and the ability to outline complex queries for user tweaking. Read more →

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT 5.4 Thinking for Deeper Reasoning

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT 5.4 Thinking for Deeper Reasoning TechRadar
OpenAI has added a new model called ChatGPT 5.4 Thinking to its ChatGPT platform. The model is designed for tasks that require more complex reasoning and multi‑step analysis, and it is offered as an optional mode for Plus, Team and Pro subscribers. While the existing ChatGPT 5.3 Instant remains the default for everyday conversations, 5.4 Thinking lets users see a brief plan of how the AI will tackle a request, enabling real‑time adjustments. The upgrade aims to make ChatGPT more useful for professional workflows such as document creation, spreadsheet analysis, and presentation design. Read more →

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4, a Professional‑Focused AI Model

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.4, a Professional‑Focused AI Model Engadget
OpenAI announced GPT-5.4, its latest frontier model built for professional tasks such as coding, data analysis, and presentation creation. The model adds native computer‑use abilities, allowing smoother mouse and keyboard interaction across multiple applications. In ChatGPT, GPT-5.4 becomes the default for the Thinking mode, outlining its plan before generating responses and supporting more precise web research. OpenAI positions the model as its most factual to date, citing an 18% reduction in error likelihood versus GPT-5.2. While priced higher for API tokens and limited to enterprise and developer customers, the release signals OpenAI’s shift toward productivity‑oriented revenue streams. Read more →

Anthropic CEO Accuses OpenAI of Lying About Pentagon Deal

Anthropic CEO Accuses OpenAI of Lying About Pentagon Deal TechRadar
Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei sent an internal memo denouncing OpenAI's statements about its new Pentagon agreement as "straight up lies" and "mendacious." The memo follows Anthropic's withdrawal from a separate U.S. intelligence contract over concerns about AI use in mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. Amodei criticizes OpenAI for focusing on employee appeasement rather than genuine safety safeguards and questions the vague "all lawful use" language in the Pentagon deal. OpenAI’s Sam Altman later admitted the announcement was rushed, while reports suggest Anthropic may be re‑entering talks with the Pentagon. Read more →

Canadian Government Secures New Safety Commitments from OpenAI

Canadian Government Secures New Safety Commitments from OpenAI Engadget
The Canadian government announced that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has agreed to implement additional safety measures for its AI services. The move follows a high‑school shooting where OpenAI flagged the suspect but did not alert authorities. New protocols will focus on law‑enforcement notifications, retroactive review of suspicious activity, and collaboration with Canadian privacy, mental‑health and law‑enforcement experts. OpenAI has pledged to provide a report outlining these changes, building on earlier efforts to tighten detection systems and prevent banned users from returning to the platform. Read more →

Anthropic Reopens Pentagon Negotiations After Contract Collapse

Anthropic Reopens Pentagon Negotiations After Contract Collapse TechCrunch
Anthropic's $200 million Department of Defense contract fell apart over a clause allowing unrestricted military use of its AI. After the Pentagon turned to OpenAI, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei resumed talks with Pentagon official Emil Michael to seek a compromise that would limit uses such as domestic surveillance and autonomous weapons. Both sides have exchanged sharp criticism, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has threatened to label Anthropic a supply‑chain risk, a move that could bar the company from future military‑related work. Read more →