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The US reportedly used Anthropic's AI for its attack on Iran, just after banning it

The US reportedly used Anthropic's AI for its attack on Iran, just after banning it Engadget
President Trump posted on Truth Social ordering all federal agencies to "immediately cease all use of Anthropic's technology" after a disagreement with the Department of Defense. Hours later, the United States carried out a major air strike on Iran with the assistance of Anthropic's AI tools, according to the Wall Street Journal. The president announced a six‑month phase‑out for agencies still using the technology, noting that the Department of Defense may shift to other AI providers such as xAI and OpenAI. This follows earlier reports that Anthropic's Claude was used in the capture of former Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro. Read more →

OpenAI Details Safeguards in New Pentagon AI Agreement

OpenAI Details Safeguards in New Pentagon AI Agreement TechCrunch
OpenAI announced a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense that it says protects three core red lines: mass domestic surveillance, autonomous weapons, and high‑stakes automated decisions. The company stresses a multi‑layered safety approach that includes full control over its safety stack, cloud‑based deployment, cleared personnel involvement, and strong contractual protections. OpenAI contrasts its stance with Anthropic, which failed to secure a similar deal, and emphasizes that its architecture prevents direct integration of models into weapon systems or sensors. Executives acknowledge the agreement was rushed and faced criticism, but argue it helps de‑escalate tensions between the defense sector and AI labs. Read more →

OpenAI’s Military Deal Sparks User Exodus and Ethical Backlash

OpenAI’s Military Deal Sparks User Exodus and Ethical Backlash TechRadar
OpenAI has signed a contract with the U.S. Department of War, prompting a wave of criticism from ChatGPT users and industry observers. After Anthropic turned down a similar deal over safety concerns, OpenAI announced its agreement, claiming it includes stronger safeguards. Many users are canceling their ChatGPT subscriptions, moving to alternatives like Claude, and posting guides on how to remove their data. Critics accuse OpenAI of abandoning ethical standards, while the company insists its contract contains “red lines” to prevent misuse. The controversy has fueled a broader debate about AI safety, surveillance, and autonomous weapons. Read more →

Anthropic’s Claude Surpasses ChatGPT to Top Apple’s Free AI App Rankings

Anthropic’s Claude Surpasses ChatGPT to Top Apple’s Free AI App Rankings TechCrunch
Anthropic’s chatbot Claude has surged to the number‑one spot in Apple’s U.S. free app store, overtaking OpenAI’s ChatGPT. The rapid climb, from outside the top 100 in January to first place within days, coincides with record daily sign‑ups, a 60% rise in free users since January, and a doubling of paid subscribers this year. The growth follows Anthropic’s contentious negotiations with the Pentagon, which led President Donald Trump to halt federal use of the company’s products and the Defense Secretary to label Anthropic a supply‑chain threat. OpenAI later announced its own Pentagon agreement with safeguards. Read more →

Why AI Voice Assistants Default to Female Voices and What It Means

Why AI Voice Assistants Default to Female Voices and What It Means TechRadar
AI voice assistants have long defaulted to female voices, a pattern rooted in historical labor roles, early speech‑data sets, and research suggesting users find female voices pleasant. While newer systems offer male and gender‑neutral options, the bias persists and can reinforce stereotypes about who serves and who holds authority. Studies show mixed evidence on trust differences, and the lack of regulatory standards leaves the issue unresolved. Expanding neutral voice choices, diversifying development teams, and addressing gender bias in design are suggested steps toward more equitable AI. Read more →

Lenovo Introduces Magic Bay Tiko, a Physical AI Pomodoro Companion

Lenovo Introduces Magic Bay Tiko, a Physical AI Pomodoro Companion CNET
Lenovo is preparing to sell the Magic Bay Tiko, a small magnetic accessory that attaches to compatible Lenovo laptops and houses an animated AI companion. Tiko can control music, open web pages, answer questions, and serve as a virtual body‑doubling partner with a built‑in timer for focused work sessions and wellness breaks. Users can interact via text, voice, or emoji, and even add short breathing exercises. While the device requires a laptop with a Magic Bay port, it offers a tangible, personable way to boost productivity and manage work intervals. Read more →

Anthropic’s Claude Overtakes ChatGPT in US App Store Amid Defense Partnership Backlash

Anthropic’s Claude Overtakes ChatGPT in US App Store Amid Defense Partnership Backlash Digital Trends
Anthropic’s Claude has risen to the top of the free AI chatbot rankings in the United States App Store, displacing OpenAI’s ChatGPT. The surge follows a wave of public criticism over OpenAI’s collaboration with the U.S. Department of Defence, prompting a social media movement urging users to cancel ChatGPT. Anthropic’s emphasis on strict usage policies and ethical safeguards resonated with users seeking reassurance about how AI is deployed, highlighting the growing importance of trust and transparency in the consumer AI market. Read more →

Anthropic's Claude grabs top spot in App Store after Trump's ban

Anthropic's Claude grabs top spot in App Store after Trump's ban Engadget
Anthropic's AI assistant Claude has surged to the number‑one position on Apple’s Top Free Apps chart, overtaking OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini. The surge follows President Trump’s directive that bans federal agencies from using Claude after the company refused to relax certain guardrails. The move sparked a wave of public support that boosted downloads, while Department of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth labeled the company a supply‑chain risk. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman criticized the decision, calling it a very bad one, but expressed hope for a better resolution. Read more →

Claude Surges to Top of US App Store Amid Controversy Over ChatGPT’s Military Deal

Claude Surges to Top of US App Store Amid Controversy Over ChatGPT’s Military Deal TechRadar
Claude, Anthropic's AI chatbot, has risen to the number one spot on the US Apple App Store chart following Anthropic's decision to decline a contract with the US Department of War over safety concerns. The move contrasts with OpenAI’s acceptance of a similar deal for ChatGPT, prompting many users to abandon ChatGPT and switch to Claude. President Donald Trump has called Anthropic a radical‑left AI company and urged agencies to stop using Claude, though the tool remains in use across several government bodies, including the White House and US Central Command. Read more →

U.S. Teens Widely Use AI Chatbots for Schoolwork, Study Finds

U.S. Teens Widely Use AI Chatbots for Schoolwork, Study Finds Digital Trends
A recent survey reveals that more than half of American teenagers aged 13 to 17 have turned to AI chatbots such as ChatGPT or Copilot for school assignments. While a small minority rely on these tools for most of their work, many use them for specific tasks like research, math problem solving, and editing. Teens view the technology as helpful, yet they also recognize a rise in cheating, with a majority believing it occurs at least sometimes in their schools. The findings highlight the need for clear guidelines and conversations among educators, parents, and students. Read more →

Supreme Court Declines to Hear AI-Generated Art Copyright Case

Supreme Court Declines to Hear AI-Generated Art Copyright Case Engadget
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a lawsuit brought by computer scientist Stephen Thaler seeking copyright protection for an artwork produced by his own artificial‑intelligence system. The denial leaves in place lower‑court rulings that rejected Thaler’s claim, reinforcing the Copyright Office’s stance that works must be created by a human author to qualify for protection. The decision also underscores similar rejections of Thaler’s AI‑generated patent and trademark applications, highlighting ongoing legal challenges for creators using machine‑learning tools. Read more →

Anthropic Resolves Claude AI Outage After Over Two Hours

Anthropic Resolves Claude AI Outage After Over Two Hours CNET
Anthropic experienced an outage affecting its Claude.AI, Claude Code, and Claude Opus 4.6 services that began just before 7 a.m. ET on Monday. The disruption lasted more than two hours, with Downdetector reporting a spike of nearly 2,000 reports around 6:45 a.m. ET, later dropping to 275 by 9:30 a.m. ET. Anthropic announced at 11 a.m. ET that all services were back online and thanked users for their patience amid high demand. Read more →

OpenAI Secures Pentagon Contract While Anthropic Rejects Terms

OpenAI Secures Pentagon Contract While Anthropic Rejects Terms The Verge
OpenAI announced a new agreement with the Pentagon that it says respects its safety principles on domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapon systems. Critics point out that the deal relies on the phrase “any lawful use,” which they argue could allow broad government use of the technology. Anthropic refused a similar contract, was labeled a supply‑chain risk, and has drawn industry support. The dispute highlights differing approaches to AI safety, legal compliance, and the role of technical safeguards in military applications. Read more →

Anthropic’s Claude Services Experience Widespread Outage Amid Growing User Demand

Anthropic’s Claude Services Experience Widespread Outage Amid Growing User Demand TechCrunch
Anthropic faced a large‑scale disruption affecting Claude.ai and Claude Code, with thousands of users unable to log in. The company said the issue was tied to login/logout paths and that the Claude API remained functional while a fix was being implemented. The outage occurred as the Claude app surged to the top of the App Store, overtaking ChatGPT, and as the company faced scrutiny from the U.S. government over its AI safeguards for defense use. Read more →

Anthropic Introduces Memory Import Tool for Claude, Enabling Seamless Switch from Other AI Chatbots

Anthropic Introduces Memory Import Tool for Claude, Enabling Seamless Switch from Other AI Chatbots Engadget
Anthropic has launched a new memory import feature for its Claude AI chatbot that lets users transfer conversation context from competing chatbots such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot. By extracting memories into a text prompt and feeding them into Claude, the system can assimilate the information within roughly 24 hours. Users can view and adjust what Claude remembers through the app’s settings, with a focus on work‑related topics. The rollout comes as Claude recently surged to the top of the free App Store charts, overtaking ChatGPT after Anthropic’s stance on Department of Defense AI guardrails sparked user interest and controversy. Read more →

U.S. Government Blacklists Anthropic After Pentagon Contract Refusal

U.S. Government Blacklists Anthropic After Pentagon Contract Refusal TechCrunch
The Trump administration halted all federal use of Anthropic's artificial‑intelligence technology after the company declined to allow its tools to be used for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth invoked a national‑security law to blacklist Anthropic, jeopardizing a contract worth up to $200 million and potentially barring the firm from future defense work. The move has sparked debate over AI safety commitments, industry self‑regulation, and the need for binding government oversight. Read more →

Anthropic’s Claude Climbs to No. 2 in Apple’s U.S. App Store Amid Pentagon Dispute

Anthropic’s Claude Climbs to No. 2 in Apple’s U.S. App Store Amid Pentagon Dispute TechCrunch
Anthropic’s chatbot Claude has risen to the second spot among free apps in Apple’s U.S. App Store, trailing only OpenAI’s ChatGPT and ahead of Google’s Gemini. The surge follows a high‑profile clash with the Pentagon, where Anthropic sought safeguards against the Department of Defense using its models for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to cease using Anthropic products, and the Defense Secretary labeled the company a supply‑chain threat. OpenAI later announced its own agreement with the Pentagon that includes similar safeguards. Read more →

Trump Moves to Ban Anthropic from the US Government

Trump Moves to Ban Anthropic from the US Government Ars Technica2
A dispute between the Department of Defense and AI company Anthropic has intensified, with officials exchanging criticisms publicly. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and gave the firm a deadline to revise its contract to permit “all lawful use” of its models. Experts suggest the conflict stems more from differing attitudes than concrete policy disagreements, noting that Anthropic has so far supported the Pentagon’s proposed uses. The company, founded on AI safety principles, has warned about the risks of fully autonomous weapons while acknowledging their potential defensive value. Read more →

OpenAI Secures Deal with U.S. Defense Department to Deploy Its AI Models

OpenAI Secures Deal with U.S. Defense Department to Deploy Its AI Models Engadget
OpenAI announced a contract with the U.S. Defense Department to place its artificial‑intelligence models within the agency’s network. The agreement includes two core safety principles—prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and a requirement for human responsibility over the use of force, including autonomous weapon systems. OpenAI will provide technical safeguards, assign engineers to work with the department, and run the models on cloud infrastructure, with a pending partnership to use Amazon Web Services for enterprise customers. The deal comes as rival Anthropic declined a similar government offer, citing concerns over surveillance and weaponization. Read more →

Pentagon Labels Anthropic a Supply‑Chain Risk, Sparking Industry Backlash

Pentagon Labels Anthropic a Supply‑Chain Risk, Sparking Industry Backlash Wired AI
The U.S. secretary of defense announced that Anthropic, a leading AI startup, is now designated as a supply‑chain risk for any contractor, supplier, or partner doing business with the military. The move has sent shockwaves through the tech sector, prompting Anthropic to vow legal action and raising concerns about the impact on existing defense contracts and broader AI collaborations. Industry leaders, legal experts, and policy analysts are debating the legality and potential precedent of the designation, while companies that work with both the Pentagon and Anthropic are left uncertain about their future relationships. Read more →