OpenAI agrees with Dept. of War to deploy models in their classified network (twitter.com)
1307 points by eoskx 19 hours ago
Imnimo 19 hours ago
I don't see how OpenAI employees who have signed the We Will Not Be Divided letter can continue their employment there in light of this. Surely if OpenAI had insisted upon the same things that Anthropic had, the government would not have signed this agreement. The only plausible explanation is that there is an understanding that OpenAI will not, in practice, enforce the red lines.
zingerlio 5 hours ago
OpenAI employees put knives on their own necks to demand Altman to get back and be their boss [1], not too long ago, right? Altman wiggles his tongues and makes them a solid paycheck. "We will not be divided," unless the water boils slow enough. Wait for a few months, he will renegotiate the terms with DoD, just like his move to turn OpenAI into a for-profit.
[1]: https://www.wired.com/story/openai-staff-walk-protest-sam-al...
randall an hour ago
i don’t get it. what’s his motive in your view? he literally has no shares in openai.
tedsanders 16 hours ago
I'm an OpenAI employee and I'll go out on a limb with a public comment. I agree AI shouldn't be used for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. I also think Anthropic has been treated terribly and has acted admirably. My understanding is that the OpenAI deal disallows domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, and that OpenAI is asking for the same terms for other AI companies (so that we can continue competing on the basis of differing services and not differing scruples). Given this understanding, I don't see why I should quit. If it turns out that the deal is being misdescribed or that it won't be enforced, I can see why I should quit, but so far I haven't seen any evidence that's the case.
baconner 16 hours ago
Respectfully, it's very hard to see how anyone could look at what just happened and come to the conclusion that one company ends up classed a "supply chain risk" while another agrees the the same terms that led to that. Either the terms are looser, they're not going to be enforced, or there's another reason for the loud attempt to blacklist Anthropic. It's very difficult to see how you could take this at face value in any case. If it is loose terms or a wink agreement to not check in on enforcement you're never going to be told that. We can imagine other scenerios where the terms stated were not the real reason for the blacklisting, but it's a real struggle (at least for me) to find an explanation for this deal that doesn't paint OpenAI in a very ethically questionable light.
Rebuff5007 13 hours ago
skepticATX 15 hours ago
monooso 14 hours ago
tedsanders 15 hours ago
readitalready 11 hours ago
chrisfosterelli 15 hours ago
DennisP 10 hours ago
MattyRad 6 hours ago
JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago
manmal 13 hours ago
cowsandmilk 12 hours ago
willis936 11 hours ago
az226 13 hours ago
spongebobstoes 15 hours ago
topheroo 4 hours ago
RandomTisk 5 hours ago
ukblewis 10 hours ago
tfehring 15 hours ago
(Disclosure, I'm a former OpenAI employee and current shareholder.)
I have two qualms with this deal.
First, Sam's tweet [0] reads as if this deal does not disallow autonomous weapons, but rather requires "human responsibility" for them. I don't think this is much of an assurance at all - obviously at some level a human must be responsible, but this is vague enough that I worry the responsible human could be very far out of the loop.
Second, Jeremy Lewin's tweet [1] indicates that the definitions of these guardrails are now maintained by DoW, not OpenAI. I'm currently unclear on those definitions and the process for changing them. But I worry that e.g. "mass surveillance" may be defined too narrowly for that limitation to be compatible with democratic values, or that DoW could unilaterally make it that narrow in the future. Evidently Anthropic insisted on defining these limits itself, and that was a sticking point.
Of course, it's possible that OpenAI leadership thoughtfully considered both of these points and that there are reasonable explanations for each of them. That's not clear from anything I've seen so far, but things are moving quickly so that may change in the coming days.
[0] https://x.com/sama/status/2027578652477821175
[1] https://x.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/2027594072811098230
syllogism 10 hours ago
spondyl 13 hours ago
tedd4u 4 hours ago
xpe 8 hours ago
ChadNauseam 16 hours ago
Did Sam Altman say that he wouldn't allow ChatGPT to be used for fully autonomous weapons? (Not quite the same as "human responsibility for use of force".)
I don't want to overanalyze things but I also noticed his statement didn't say "our agreement specifically says chatgpt will never be used for fully autonomous weapons or domestic mass surveillance." It said something that kind of gestured towards that, but it didn't quite come out and say it. It says "The DoW agrees with these principles, and we put them in our agreement." Could the principles have been outlined in a nonbinding preamble, or been a statement of the DoW's current intentions rather than binding their future behavior? You should be very suspicious when a corporate person says something vague that somewhat implies what you want to hear - if they could have told you explicitly what you wanted to hear, they would have.
But anyway, it doesn't matter. You said you don't think it should be used for autonomous weapons. I'd be willing to bet you 10:1 that you'll never find altman saying anything like "our agreement specifically says chatgpt will never be used for fully autonomous weapons", now or any point in the future.
scarmig 15 hours ago
khalic 13 hours ago
Barbing 15 hours ago
bogtog 9 hours ago
jacquesm 36 minutes ago
> I don't see why I should quit.
So, can you please draw the line when you will quit?
- If OpenAI deal allows domestic mass surveillance - If OpenAI allows the development of autonomous weapons - OpenAI no longer asks for the same terms for other AI companies
Correct?
If so, then if I take your words at face value:
- By your reading non-domestic mass surveillance is fine
- The development of AI based weapons is fine as long as there is one human element in there, even if it could be disabled and then the weapon would work without humans involved
- The day that OpenAI asks for the same terms for other AI companies and if those terms are not granted then that's also fine, because after all, they did ask.
I have become extremely skeptical when seeing people whose livelihood depends on a particular legal entity come out with precise wording around what does and does not constitute their red line but I find it fascinating nonetheless so if you could humor me and clarify I'd be most obliged.
retsibsi 9 hours ago
> My understanding is that the OpenAI deal disallows domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons,
In that case, what on earth just happened?
The government was so intent on amending the Anthropic deal to allow 'all lawful use', at the government's sole discretion, that it is now pretty much trying to destroy Anthropic in retaliation for refusing this. Now, almost immediately, the government has entered into a deal with OpenAI that apparently disallows the two use cases that were the main sticking points for Anthropic.
Do you not see something very, very wrong with this picture?
At the very least, OpenAI is clearly signaling to the government that it can steamroll OpenAI on these issues whenever it wants to. Or do you believe OpenAI will stand firm, even having seen what happened to Anthropic (and immediately moved in to profit from it)?
> and that OpenAI is asking for the same terms for other AI companies (so that we can continue competing on the basis of differing services and not differing scruples)
If OpenAI leadership sincerely wanted this, they just squandered the best chance they could ever have had to make it happen! Actual solidarity with Anthropic could have had a huge impact.
WarmWash 6 hours ago
throwawaywd89e 15 hours ago
"AI shouldn't be used for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons". The statement from OpenAI virtually guarantees that the intention is to use it for mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. If this wasn't the intention them the qualifier "domestic" wouldn't be used, and they would be talking about "human in the loop" control of autonomous weapons, not "human responsibility" which just means there's someone willing to stand up and say, "yep I take responsibility for the autonomous weapon systems actions", which lets be honest is the thinnest of thin safety guarantees.
_heimdall 11 hours ago
My understanding is that OpenAI's deal, and the deal others are signing, implicitly prevents the use of LLMs for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons because today one care argue those aren't legal and the deal is a blanket for allowing all lawful use.
Today it can't be used for mass surveillance, but the executive branch has all the authority it needs to later deem that lawful if it wishes to, the Patriot Act and others see to that.
Anthropic was making the limits contractually explicit, meaning the executive branch could change the line of lawfulness and still couldn't use Anthropic models for mass surveillance. That is where they got into a fight and that is where OpenAI and others can claim today that they still got the same agreement Anthropic wanted.
mattalex 14 hours ago
Assuming this is real: Why do you think anthropic was put on what is essentially an "enemy of the state" list and openai didn't?
The two things anthropic refused to do is mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, so why do _you_ think openai refused and still did not get placed on the exact same list.
It's fine to say "I'm not going to resign. I didn't even sign that letter", but thinking that openai can get away with not developing autonomous weapons or mass surveillance is naive at the very best.
pear01 16 hours ago
Why would you believe that? If that were the case what was the issue with Anthropic even about?
You, and your colleagues, should resign.
thunky 10 hours ago
permo-w 15 hours ago
komali2 13 hours ago
booleandilemma 11 hours ago
scarmig 15 hours ago
Why do you suppose OpenAI's deal led to a contract, while Anthropic's deal (ostensibly containing identical terms) gets it not only booted but declared a supply chain risk?
chasd00 7 hours ago
#1 weekend HN is not a sane place. #2 emotions are high. #3 for what it’s worth @tedsanders I understand where you’re coming from and I believe you’re making the right choice by staying or at least waiting to make a decision. Don’t let #1 and #2 hurt you emotionally or force you to make a rash decision you later regret.
Edit: I don’t work at OpenAI or in any AI business and my neck is on the chopping block if AI succeeds… like a lot of us. Don’t vilify this guy trying to do what’s right for him given the information he has.
rancar2 9 hours ago
The founders are all on a first name basis. I’m surprised no one has noted that Anthropic and OpenAI winning together by giving the world two different choices, just like the US does in its political landscape. In this circumstance, OpenAI wins the local market for its government and aligned entities (while having the free consumer by a matter of cost dynamic for that ideal customer profile which is vary broad and similar to Google’s search audience where most their revenue still depends), while Anthropic is provided the global market and prosumer market where people can afford choice by paying for it.
F7F7F7 5 hours ago
andsoitis 6 hours ago
Ted, what do you think of your CEO’s statement: “the DoW displayed a deep respect for safety and a desire to partner to achieve the best possible outcome.”
The evidence seems to overwhelmingly point in the opposite direction.
phs318u 16 hours ago
Thank you for responding. Everyone wants to think they will “do the right thing” when their own personal Rubicon is challenged. In practice, so many factors are at play, not least of which are the other people you may be responsible for. The calculus of balancing those differing imperatives is only straightforward for those that have never faced this squarely. I’ve been marched out of jobs twice for standing up for what I believed to be right at the time. Am still literally blacklisted (much to the surprise of various recruiters) at a major bank here 8 years after the fact. I can’t imagine that the threat of being blacklisted from a whole raft of companies contracting with a known vindictive regime would make the decision easier.
syllogism 12 hours ago
You should quit because the only reasonable thing for your leadership to have done is to refuse to sign any agreement with DoW whatsoever while it's attempting to strongarm Anthropic in this fashion.
It doesn't even matter if OpenAI is offered the same terms that Anthropic refused. It's absurd to accept them and do business with the Pentagon in that situation.
If you take the government at its word, it's killing Anthropic because Anthropic wanted to assert the ability to draw _some_ sort of redline. If OpenAI's position is "well sucks to be them", there's nothing stopping Hegseth from doing the same to OpenAI.
It doesn't matter at all if OpenAI gets the deal at the same redline Anthropic was trying to assert. If at the end of this the government has succeeded in cutting Anthropic off from the economy, what's next for OpenAI? What happens next time when OpenAI tries to assert some sort of redline?
What's the point of any talk of "AI Safety" if you sign on to a regime where Hegseth (of all people) can just demand the keys and you hand them right over?
latexr 14 hours ago
> My understanding is that the OpenAI deal disallows domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons
And you believe the US government, let alone the current one will respect that? Why? Is it naïveté or do you support the current regime?
> If it turns out that the deal is being misdescribed or that it won't be enforced, I can see why I should quit.
So your logic is your company is selling harmful technology to a bunch of known liars who are threatening to invade democratic countries, but because they haven’t lied yet in this case (for lack of opportunity), you’ll wait until the harm is done and then maybe quit?
I’ll go out on a limb and say you won’t. You seem to be trying really hard to justify to yourself what’s happening so you can sleep at night.
Know that when things go wrong (not if, when), the blood will be on your hands too.
exizt88 10 hours ago
roflburger 9 hours ago
Don't piss on my leg and tell me it's raining.
segmondy 15 hours ago
You can't be this naive?
NewsaHackO 5 hours ago
Qiu_Zhanxuan 5 hours ago
You're paid to look the other way. At least, own it.
mda 12 hours ago
I can totally see why you should quit, but we see different things apparently.
fluidcruft 8 hours ago
What people don't understand is that domestic surveillance by the government doesn't happen and isn't needed. They know it's illegal and unpopular and for over two decades they have a loophole. Since the Bush administration it's been arranged for private contractors to do the domestic surveillance on the government's behalf. Entire industries have been built around creating "business records" for no other purpose than to sell them to the government to support domestic surveillance. This is entirely legal and why the DoW has been able to get away with saying things like "domestic surveillance is illegal, we don't do that" for over two decades while simultaneously throwing a shit fit about needing "all legal uses" if their access to domestic surveillance is threatened.
There's a big difference between "the government won't use our tools for domestic surveillance" (DoW/DoD/OpenAI/etc) and "we won't allow anyone to use our tools to support domestic surveillance by the government" (Anthropic)
Hegseth and the current Trump admin are completely incompetent in execution of just about everything but competent administrations (of both parties) have been playing this game for a long time and it's already a lost cause.
germandiago 5 hours ago
To me it looks weird that a replacement won't accept Dept of War terms. This was the source of the dispute so...
I do not know but I would not very optimistic about those new terms.
motbus3 6 hours ago
These sort of agreements are easily bypassable, especially on such tools.
Someone might just create a spawn of openai with a tag and do all the stuff there...
There is no much guarantee I think
virtualritz 13 hours ago
Giving you the benefit of the doubt and assuming [1] does not play a role in your thinking:
I don't mean this in any way rude and I apologize if this comes accross as such but believing it won't be used in exactly this way is just naive. History has taught us this lesson again and again and again.
assimpleaspossi 10 hours ago
How would OpenAI respond to China or Russia using OpenAI--or any AI--for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons?
Griffinsauce 15 hours ago
Aside from that unlikely read, this deal was still used as a pressure point on Anthropic, there's absolutely no way OpenAI was not used as a stick to hit with during negotiations.
What is your red line?
datsci_est_2015 8 hours ago
Please read about the imperial boomerang https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_boomerang
kaashif 15 hours ago
Anthropic is deemed a betrayer and a supply chain risk for actually enforcing their principles.
OpenAI agrees to be put in the same position as Anthropic.
It seems like you must actually somehow believe that history will repeat itself, Hegseth will deem OpenAI a supply chain risk too, then move to Grok or something?
There's surely no way that's actually what you believe...
trvz 15 hours ago
You may have missed that no single word said or written by any of the current US government’s members can be believed.
curiousgal 14 hours ago
This is not meant as a personal attack but this has got to be the most naive thing I've read.
ryan_n 10 hours ago
For the record I don’t care if you quit or not. Cash rules after all… However, you are incredibly naive if you think the current admin will follow through on those terms.
sensanaty 11 hours ago
Assuming this isn't a troll and you really think this, you should at least have the cojones to admit you're taking the blood money instead of trying to pretzel the truth so hard that you just look like a moron instead.
nullocator 15 hours ago
I don't know you, so maybe you're actually for real and speaking on good faith here but honestly this and your other responses in this thread read exactly like "...salary depends on not understanding"
mpalmer 8 hours ago
Looks to me like you have decided that you are being paid to shut up and take the word of the most thoroughly dishonest and corrupt US government we've yet seen. Why on God's slowly-browning green earth do you trust that Altman got the deal Anthropic was trying for?
q3k 14 hours ago
Coward.
jakeydus 13 hours ago
dannyfreeman 9 hours ago
Your work will be used to power an auto aim kill bot. I personally couldn't live with that.
sph 8 hours ago
4b11b4 10 hours ago
lol, naive as hell. why would your company's agreement be the same as the one who just refused the _same_ agreement? Even my question doesn't even make sense, this is a contradiction, therefore your statement must be false. There, it's proven
vimda 13 hours ago
"domestic" "mass" surveillance, two words that can be stretched so thin they basically invalidate the whole term. Mass surveillance on other countries? Guess that's fine. Surveillance on just a couple of cities that happen to be resisting the regime? Well, it's not _mass_ surveillance, just a couple of cities!
Nekorosu 13 hours ago
I won't trust a word coming from Sam Altman's mouth until I see official signed documents (which I won't).
johnbellone 11 hours ago
bambax 13 hours ago
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it."
retornam 15 hours ago
I have a bridge to Brooklyn to sell you if you believe this.
Standing up for whats right often is not easy and involves hard choices and consequences, your leader has shown you and the world that he is not to be trusted.
I can't tell you what to do but I hope you make the right decision.
leptons 13 hours ago
>OpenAI deal disallows domestic mass surveillance
And the US Military is forbidden from operating on US soil, but that didn't stop this administration from deploying US Marines to California recently.
You're fooling yourself if you think this administration is following any kind of rule.
mmanfrin 15 hours ago
You can make blood money but you have to be aware it's blood money. Don't delude yourself in to thinking you work for an ethical or moral company.
mathisfun123 16 hours ago
> Given this understanding, I don't see why I should quit.
raw_anon_1111 5 hours ago
“ It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”
You’re being purposefully niave if you trust any government and especially this government to behave legally or ethically.
Spooky23 9 hours ago
You work for a company that’s part of the Trump, Ellison, Kutchner orbit of corruption.
Y’all are developing amazing technology. But accept reality and drop whatever sense of moral righteousness you’re carrying here. Not because some asshole on the internet says so, but for your own mental health.
fooker 5 hours ago
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it"
thisisit 9 hours ago
Your response is a perfect encapsulation of "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it."
I think its wrong for someone to ask someone to resign but acting that there is no issue here is debating in bad faith.
outside1234 7 hours ago
Listen, if the Government using it for legit and safe use cases wasn’t an issue, then they wouldn’t have complained about Anthropic’s language. Sam is just looking the other way and pretending for you employees.
Or Sam bribed the government to do this, which is also entirely possible.
ALittleLight 7 hours ago
This seems like the kind of foolishness it takes a lot of money to believe. Anthropic blew up their contract with the Pentagon over concerns on lethal autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. OpenAI rushes in to do what Anthropic wouldn't.
If you think that means your company isn't going to be involved in lethal autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance... I don't really know what to tell you. I doubt you really believe that. Obviously you will be involved in that and you are effectively working on those projects now.
UncleMeat 8 hours ago
Bad timing to be defending OpenAI's collaboration with the military as it launches an illegal bombing campaign.
tibbydudeza 10 hours ago
At the next town hall ask them directly - you making assumptions here.
cyanydeez 12 hours ago
Right beautifying lies are always going to head in the direction of doing whats self interested.
matkoniecz 10 hours ago
Can you at least stop lying to yourself? Given what they did with Anthropic for not supporting domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons...
> My understanding is that the OpenAI deal disallows domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons
Your understanding is entirely wrong. At least stop lying to yourself and admit that you are entirely fine with working on evil things if you are paid enough.
Imustaskforhelp 3 hours ago
there is a recent post about how one of the top OpenAI exec has given 25 million$ to a Trump PAC before publicly supporting Anthropic/signing this deal.
One got characterized as supply chain risk and so much for OpenAI to get the same.
And even that being said, I can be wrong but if I remember, OpenAI and every other company had basically accepted all uses and it was only Anthropic which said no to these two demands.
And I think that this whole scenario became public because Anthropic denied, I do think that the deal could've been done sneakily if Anthropic wanted.
So now OpenAI taking the deal doesn't help with the fact that to me, it looks like they can always walk back and all the optics are horrendous to me for OpenAI so I am curious what you think.
The thing which I am thinking OTOH is why would OpenAI come and say, hey guys yea we are gonna feed autonomous killing machines. Of course they are gonna try to keep it a secret right before their IPO and you are an employee and you mention walking out of openAI but with the current optics, it seems that you/other employees of OpenAI are also more willing to work because evidence isn't out here but to me, as others have pointed out, it looks like slowly boiling the water.
OpenAI gets to have the cake and eat it too but I don't think that there's free lunch. I simply don't understand why DOD would make such a high mess about Anthropic terms being outrageous and then sign the same deal with same terms with OpenAI unless there's a catch. Only time will tell though how wrong or right I am though.
If I may ask, how transparent is OpenAI from an employees perspective? Just out of curiosity but will you as a employee get informed of if OpenAI's top leadership (Sam?) decided that the deal gets changed and DOD gets to have Autonomous killing machine. Would you as an employee or us as the general public get information about it if the deal is done through secret back doors. Snowden did show that a lot of secret court deals were made not available to public until he whistleblowed but not all things get whistleblowed though, so I am genuinely curious to hear your thoughts.
johnwheeler 6 hours ago
I know the money is good, but if I were you (or any OpenAI employee), I'd move over to Google or Anthropic posthaste.
Is it really worth the long-term risk being associated with Sam Altman when the other firms would willingly take you and probably give you a pay bump to boot?
It doesn't make sense to me why anyone would want to associate themselves with Altman. He is universally distrusted. No one believes anything he says. It's insane to work with a person who PG, Ilya, Murati, Musk have all designated a liar and just general creep.
Defending him or the firms actions instantly makes you look terrible, like you'll gladly take the "Elites vs UBI recipients" his vision propagates.
Shame on you people. What a disgusting vision.
wanderlust123 10 hours ago
So its ok as long as its not domestic. Got it
wjekkekene 11 hours ago
What a joke
popalchemist 14 hours ago
Why would you trust anything out of Sam's mouth? He's a sociopath. Is that lost on you?
vultour 11 hours ago
jackmott42 7 hours ago
You are naive, and assisting a fascist regime.
make3 14 hours ago
insane cope
jdiaz97 12 hours ago
Scam Altman already got community noted btw
tempaccount420 19 hours ago
Didn't the safety-conscious employees already leave when OpenAI fired Sam Altman and then re-hired him?
In my mind the only people left are those who are there for the stocks.
AbstractH24 18 hours ago
In all seriousness, what’s the average tenure at OpenAI and how much of the company in March 2026 was even around for that?
lioeters 17 hours ago
bobanrocky 16 hours ago
And h1 slaves
arugulum 18 hours ago
> Surely if OpenAI had insisted upon the same things that Anthropic had, the government would not have signed this agreement.
But they did.
"Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement."
layer8 17 hours ago
The difference is that Anthropic wanted to reserve the right to judge when the red lines are crossed, while OpenAI will defer to the DoD and its policies for that. In both cases, the two parties can claim to agree on the principles, but when push comes to shove, who decides on whether the principles are violated differs.
pseudalopex 17 hours ago
remarkEon 17 hours ago
outside1234 17 hours ago
WD-42 17 hours ago
I'm sure it's a matter of interpretation. Anthropic thinks the DoW's demands will lead to mass surveillance and auto-kill bots. The DoW probably disagrees with that interpretation, and all OpenAI needs to do is agree with the DoW.
My bet is that what the DoW wants is pretty clearly tied to mass surveillance and kill-bots. Altman is a snake.
PaulDavisThe1st 16 hours ago
IsTom 12 hours ago
tombert 16 hours ago
khalic 13 hours ago
Anthropic has safeguards baked in the model, this is the only way to make sur it's harder for the DOJ to misuse it. A pinky swear from the DoD means nothing
propagandist 17 hours ago
Human responsibility is not the same as human decision making.
And they are crossing the picket line, which honestly I was sure they would do, though I did expect it to take a bit longer.
This is too transparent even for sama.
nick486 17 hours ago
newguytony 18 hours ago
Good ole Sammy has never lied
arugulum 17 hours ago
fooker 17 hours ago
Unrelated, but want to buy a bridge?
You could recoup your investment in a year by collecting toll. Expedited financing available on good credit!
tomhow 17 hours ago
2snakes 16 hours ago
I think it is like a loyalty test to an authority above the law (executive immunity) in order to do business. “If we tell you to do so, you may do something you thought was right or wrong.” It is like an induction into a faction and the way the decisions could be made. Doesn’t necessarily mean anything about “in practice in the future”, just that the cybernetic override is there tacitly. If the authority thinks they can get away with something, they will provide protection for consequences too. Some people more equal than others when it comes to justice for all, etc. There are probably alternative styles for group decision making…
ecocentrik 5 hours ago
I think the problem might actually be with reenforcing the red lines. The events of the last few weeks and this new deal only make sense if Anthropic was trying to find out how Palantir and the Pentagon had circumvented their restrictions to attempt to reenforce those restrictions like company actually concerned about the misuse of their product. OpenAI most likely came in with assurances that they wouldn't attempt to reinforce their restrictions.
weatherlite 15 hours ago
> I don't see how OpenAI employees who have signed the We Will Not Be Divided letter can continue their employment there in light of this
Well some may voluntarily leave, some will be actively poached by Anthropic perhaps and some I suppose will stay in their jobs because leaving isn't an easy decision to make.
latexr 14 hours ago
> some I suppose will stay in their jobs because leaving isn't an easy decision to make.
Anyone who chooses to stay shouldn’t have signed the letter. What’s the point of doing it if you’re not going to follow through? If you signed the letter and don’t leave after the demands aren’t met, you’re a liar and a coward and are actively harming every signatory of every future letter.
coliveira 18 hours ago
Yes, what is implied in this episode is that all big companies that do AI development or provide computing for Ai are now signing for these very shady uses of their technologies.
miohtama 13 hours ago
OpenAI is already doing mass surveillance, so nothing changes
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/21/tumbler-ridge-...
granzymes 18 hours ago
>Surely if OpenAI had insisted upon the same things that Anthropic had, the government would not have signed this agreement.
Have we been watching the same Trump admin for the last year? That sound exactly like something the government would do: pointlessly throw a fit and end up signing a worse deal after blowing up all political capital.
unethical_ban 17 hours ago
While that thought crossed my mind, someone in a sub thread of parent comment made a point: OpenAI made a statement about how "We insisted this be not be used in those ways and DoD totally says they won't". Which sounds to me like they ceded any hard terms oand conditions and are letting the DoD use it in "any lawful means" which is what Anthropic didn't stand for.
davidw 18 hours ago
They seem moderately competent at doing blatant corruption ( https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/official-trump/ , Qatari jet, etc...). See jeffbee's comment below.
ivan_gammel 14 hours ago
Another plausible explanation that is familiar to a lot of people in other countries is banal corruption. Kick out one competitor on bogus allegations, then on the next day invite another one… what else that could be?
pluc 10 hours ago
Easy: have no principles that money can't buy. That's the American Dream!
chazftw 8 hours ago
It was just a ruse to figure out who to fire. Either resign on your own terms or get fired. Companies and government only have one loyalty, to themselves,
4ndrewl 11 hours ago
This is not a turning point. This is the destination. Were you onboard the wrong train?
vander_elst 12 hours ago
> I don't see how OpenAI employees who have signed the We Will Not Be Divided letter can continue their employment [...]
Sometimes money is more attractive than morality. So I guess money is the answer here.
KellyCriterion 11 hours ago
The ones who signed are not the same as the ones who didnt sign and continue to work there, Id guess?
tjwebbnorfolk 3 hours ago
> I don't see how OpenAI employees who have signed the We Will Not Be Divided letter can continue their employment there
um, easy -- everyone has a price. Some of the most highly-paid workers on the planet work there.
Pay me $5M/yr and there are a LOT of things I wouldn't do for $300k.
chpatrick 13 hours ago
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it." - Upton Sinclair
hirvi74 17 hours ago
> The only plausible explanation is that there is an understanding that OpenAI will not, in practice, enforce the red lines.
Do you mean the same OpenAI that has a retired U.S. Army General & former director of the NSA (Gen. Nakasone) serving on its board of directors?
raw_anon_1111 5 hours ago
> I don't see how OpenAI employees who have signed the We Will Not Be Divided letter can continue their employment there in light of this
no_wizard 12 hours ago
For all I know Sam Altman orchestrated this via well timed donations and whatever the hell contacts he has in government, Trump specifically seems to have taken the man
So using Anthropic’s own words to cover a power play or pulling relationships to see if they could get anthropic to balk at it.
the_real_cher 12 hours ago
Have you seen the size of OpenAi employees comp?
Woolad theyll create the autonomous military robots themselves for that check.
garyclarke27 11 hours ago
I would not discount how much of a factor, irrational human emotions play in negotiations. Dario is arrogant and pompous so probably wound Hegseth up the wrong way. Sam is much more charming and amenable so more able to get his way despite similar terms.
shevy-java 11 hours ago
Makes sense.
lazide 11 hours ago
I few will leave. Most will look nervously at their (non-public) stock and their bank accounts, and continuing keeping on.
tmpz22 8 hours ago
They were always in it just for the money.
The morals were just there while it was easy virtue signaling.
Same for almost all Google, Facebook, etc. Prove me wrong, please.
outside1234 17 hours ago
All of us can act too. Stop using the OpenAI models. Stop using the app. Design in other models no matter what. Screw these guys.
foo12bar 17 hours ago
Do you expect that to work?
calgoo 12 hours ago
PaulDavisThe1st 16 hours ago
throw0101c 10 hours ago
komali2 13 hours ago
righthand 9 hours ago
Money buddy, they never cared. They didn’t care when they went back on their safety and guidance boards, they didn’t care when they tried to push Altman out, and these employees won’t care when the first AI nuke launches. Money, money, money so they don’t think about it later. It’s the exact same reason Facebook employees have given us the other side of surveillance hell.
vineyardmike 19 hours ago
Nah. It's possible that the agreement still supports the required terms.
There is more to this story behind the scenes. The government wanted to show power and control over our companies and industries. They didn’t need those terms for any specific utility, they wanted to fight “woke” business that stood up to them.
Supposedly OpenAI had the same terms as Anthropic (according to SamA). Maybe they offered it cheaper and that’s why they agreed. Maybe it’s all the lobbying money from OpenAI that let the government look the other way. Maybe it’s all the PR announcements SamA and Trump do together.
sigmar 18 hours ago
>Supposedly OpenAI had the same terms
"we put them into our agreement." is strange framing is Altman's tweet. Makes me think the agreement does mention the principles, but doesn't state them as binding rules DoD must follow.
Imnimo 18 hours ago
None of those explanations are compatible with the pledge of solidarity in the We Will Not Be Divided letter.
harmonic18374 18 hours ago
I prescribe literally zero truth value to what Sam says. He will say whatever he needs to get ahead. It is honestly irritating to me that you and many others here seem to implicitly assume his messages are correlated with truth, doing his social engineering work for him, as if his word should adjust your priors even slightly.
I don't necessarily think he's lying, but there's so much obvious incentive for him to lie here (if only because his employees can save face).
chamomeal 18 hours ago
dataflow 18 hours ago
sesqu 17 hours ago
pseudalopex 17 hours ago
> Supposedly OpenAI had the same terms as Anthropic (according to SamA).
He said human responsibility. Anthropic said human in the loop.
And Anthropic refused to say any lawful purpose would be allowed reportedly.
jeffbee 18 hours ago
It's this simple: Trump is a criminal. Larry Ellison is his pal. Sam Altman has a huge deal for cloud services from Oracle. Trump is using the DoD budget to backstop Ellison's business.
coliveira 18 hours ago
drivebyhooting 18 hours ago
SpicyLemonZest 19 hours ago
Maybe Sam Altman said nicer things about Donald Trump. Maybe he promised that he would not revoke their API keys when Hegseth directs the military to seize ballots. Maybe he's jockeying for position to take over the government when AGI hits.
Ultimately, I don't know how much the specific reasons matter. Pete Hegseth must be removed from office, OpenAI must be destroyed for their betrayal of the US public, that's all there is to it.
toufka 18 hours ago
blueblisters 17 hours ago
My knee-jerk reaction to this was looks like an opportunistic maneuver that Sam is known for and I'm considering canceling my subscriptions and business with OpenAI
But what's the most charitable / objective interpretation of this?
For example - https://x.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/2027594072811098230
Does it suggest that determination of "lawful use" and Dario's concerns falls upon the government, not the AI provider?
Other folks have claimed that Anthropic planned to burn the contentious redlines into Claude's constitution.
Update: I have cancelled my subscriptions until OpenAI clarifies the situation. From an alignment perspective Anthropic's stand seems like the correct long-term approach. And at least some AI researchers appear to agree.
cedws 15 hours ago
I think Altman probably rationalised it to himself by thinking that if he doesn’t do it, Musk/xAI will, and they give zero fucks about safety. So maybe he told himself that it’s better if OpenAI does it.
Griffinsauce 14 hours ago
Is there a name for this phenomenon? I've taken to calling it "the nihilist's excuse"
fer 14 hours ago
ivanjermakov 13 hours ago
mlpinit 10 hours ago
coryodaniel 3 hours ago
askvictor 2 hours ago
I feel that if xAI worked well for the job, it would have been already been selected.
slekker 14 hours ago
Knowing Sam, that's exactly what happened -- and the echo chamber inside OpenAI wouldnt dare to disagree
4b11b4 10 hours ago
yeah or he didn't even
Analemma_ 17 hours ago
As people have repeatedly mentioned, if the War Department was unhappy with Anthropic's terms, they could have refused to sign the contract. But they didn't: they were fine with it for over a year. And if they changed their mind, they could've ended the contract and both sides could've walked away. Anthropic said that would've been fine. But that's not what happened either: they threatened Anthropic with both SCR designation and a DPA takeover if Anthropic didn't agree to unilateral renegotiation of terms that the War Department had already agreed were fine.
It's absurd, and doubly so if OAI's deal includes the same or even similar redlines to what Anthropic had.
spongebobstoes 15 hours ago
it seems like oai deal does include the same red lines, plus some more, and the ability for oai to deploy safety systems to limit the use cases of the model via technical means
this seems strictly better than what anthropic had. anthropic has ruined their relationship with the US govt, giving oai a good negotiating hand
the oai folks are good at making deals, just look at all the complex funding arrangements they have
mpalmer 8 hours ago
manmal 13 hours ago
Unless you're using an enterprise plan or pay per token, you're not hurting their business at all by cancelling. The consumer plans are heavily subsidised.
cube00 12 hours ago
Cancelling is the only language these companies understand.
Even Disney couldn't ignore the mass cancellations after dropping Kimmel and Disney+ bearly turns over a profit.
blueblisters 12 hours ago
I think their consumer plans are gross margin positive but OpenAI has ~50M paying subscribers driving >$10B in revenue.
Realistically, you need at least ~1M subscribers to cancel to make this painful.
But I suspect this will get drowned out in the face of other news.
joemi 4 hours ago
This is ultimately about drawing moral lines, isn't it? In that case it wouldn't matter if it hurts their business or not.
tjpnz 13 hours ago
It will hurt in future funding rounds if their subscriber metric is stalling or going backwards, regardless of how many of those subscriptions are profitable.
Hamuko 13 hours ago
Does it matter? These AI companies need to be able to prove that users are willing to pay at all, even if they're not paying a profitable amount of money. If investors see that they're dumping money into something that's not selling, why continue to do so?
coryodaniel 3 hours ago
There is value tied to free users, but also, not sure I want my work and data in a product that’s OK with DoD mass surveillance and I’m not sure my customers would want their data pumping through it either.
Imustaskforhelp 3 hours ago
AI companies seem to be growth companies whose whole point seems to be that they are okay with extreme amounts of losses/lack of profitability so long as they grow a lot.
If you back down from using Chatgpt, you throw a wrench in their growth numbers.
I would consider training data could have important info as well and to be honest, with their circular financing, Nvidia <-> openAI with GPU's being the main cost (and given that OpenAI isn't facing the Ram crisis heck it created the ram crisis by pre-ordering 20%) and recent deals, money isn't an issue to them for some time now. Growth is.
You are also forgetting that OpenAI is planning to add ads in which case you would be the product, its better not to discourage anyone who wishes to cancel perhaps.
Other commentators have made some good points as well and I used to think the same thing as you but I do think that cancelling might make the most sense.
That or if you want to cause maximum damage, trying to burn the most tokens that you physically can asking random things to burn OpenAI's money but remember that the model still takes energy requirements so you'd be wasting energy for something quite pointless.
IMO, it might be better to cancel/not use OpenAI.
gabeh 16 hours ago
It's only $200 from me for the remainder of the year but you're not getting it anymore OpenAI. Voting with my wallet tonight. Really sad, I've followed OpenAI for years, way before ChatGPT. It's just too hard to true up my values with how they've behaved recently. This sucks. Goodnight everyone.
unfunco 13 hours ago
I cancelled and deleted my account and I got an email immediately with a pro-rata refund. You can get that money back.
user0648 5 hours ago
Same. Moving to Anthropic. At some point we can’t let the slide continue
jobs_throwaway 7 hours ago
Just cancelled my Plus plan as well. I will still wait to see how things play out before deciding if I'll delete my account altogether, but OpenAI's actions simply don't align with my values at the moment. Very disappointing.
tim333 8 hours ago
It's been kind of downhill since the 2023 Altman firing and rehiring.
quantumwannabe 18 hours ago
More details on the difference between the OpenAI and Anthropic contracts from one of the Under Secretaries of State:
>The axios article doesn’t have much detail and this is DoW’s decision, not mine. But if the contract defines the guardrails with reference to legal constraints (e.g. mass surveillance in contravention of specific authorities) rather than based on the purely subjective conditions included in Anthropic’s TOS, then yes. This, btw, was a compromise offered to—and rejected by—Anthropic.
https://x.com/UnderSecretaryF/status/2027566426970530135
> For the avoidance of doubt, the OpenAI - @DeptofWar contract flows from the touchstone of “all lawful use” that DoW has rightfully insisted upon & xAI agreed to. But as Sam explained, it references certain existing legal authorities and includes certain mutually agreed upon safety mechanisms. This, again, is a compromise that Anthropic was offered, and rejected.
> Even if the substantive issues are the same there is a huge difference between (1) memorializing specific safety concerns by reference to particular legal and policy authorities, which are products of our constitutional and political system, and (2) insisting upon a set of prudential constraints subject to the interpretation of a private company and CEO. As we have been saying, the question is fundamental—who decides these weighty questions? Approach (1), accepted by OAI, references laws and thus appropriately vests those questions in our democratic system. Approach (2) unacceptably vests those questions in a single unaccountable CEO who would usurp sovereign control of our most sensitive systems.
> It is a great day for both America’s national security and AI leadership that two of our leading labs, OAI and xAI have reached the patriotic and correct answer here
toraway 17 hours ago
It is a great day for both America’s national security and AI leadership that two of our leading labs, OAI and xAI have reached the patriotic and correct answer here
He's an administration official openly cheerleading his team. This should be characterized as the insider perspective/spin, not a neutral analysis of the relevant facts.MostlyStable 15 hours ago
Even this most-charitable-possible (to DoW) explanation does not even come close to justifying the supply chain risk designation. It is absolutely enough (and honestly more than enough) for a contract cancellation and a switch to a competitor. DoW could have done that for any reason at all, or no reason at all. If they had issues with Anthropics terms, they 100% should have done that.
Nothing in the quoted text comes anywhere close to the realm of justifying the retaliatory actions.
mindcandy 5 hours ago
The DoW is engaging in simple crybullying. In my time as an online moderator I see it all the time.
“You are impinging on my freedom to force you to participate in activities you have expressly indicated it is against your will to engage in! You bully! I am such a victim!”
https://xcancel.com/SecWar/status/2027507717469049070?s=20
This is endemic of the entire current administration. It is as disappointing as it is unsurprising.
ukblewis 9 hours ago
AFAIK, the U.S. government is fully entitled to serve them under the U.S. Department of War’s terms as per the Defense Production Act. The government has yet to do this, but a company acting in a way that the Department of War perceives as benefiting enemy states could certainly be a justification for declaring a supply chain risk. Anthropic’s decision timing as the U.S. has launched a war in the Middle East to save millions of Iranian lives (tens if not hundreds of thousands of Iranians have already been killed by the Islamic Regime) definitely seems to be unjustifiable and the U.S. Department of War (so weird for me to type that instead of DOD) was smart, in my opinion, not to force Anthropic to work with them but to drop all work with them and move to providers who will meet the military’s needs while at war.
(Just in case anyone was wondering, I live in Israel)
nxobject 9 hours ago
joemi 4 hours ago
otterley 7 hours ago
piker 11 hours ago
I find myself totally agreeing with the quoted text and also this sentiment. It just makes no sense to nuke Anthropic as a negotiation tactic if your interest is in preserving the republic long term.
advisedwang 17 hours ago
A government promise that they'll only do lawful things is not reassuring at all:
1. We've seen government lawyers write memos explaining why such-and-such obviously illegal act is legal (see: torture memo). Until challenged, this is basically law.
2. We've seen government change the law to make whatever they want legal (see: patriot act)
3. We've seen courts just interpret laws to make things legal
A contractor doesn't realistically have the power to push back against any of these avenues if they agree to allow anything legal.
(At the risk of triggering Godwin's Law, remember that for the most part the Holocaust was entirely legal - the Nazi's established the necessary authorization. Just to illustrate that when it comes to certain government crimes, the law alone is an insufficient shield.)
Tepix 15 hours ago
This is it exactly.
makeramen 15 hours ago
The DoW wants to only be beholden to the laws, and not to Anthropics TOS.
So the question is: do you trust the government to effectively govern its own use of AI? or do you trust Anthropic's enforcement of its TOS?
nullocator 15 hours ago
They DoW doesn't care about laws, that's the whole point. Anthropic did not believe the most law breaking administration in history when their drunkard incompetent leader said "lol trust us bro"
ajkjk 3 hours ago
how I wish that "patriotic" meant something instead of just "did what we wanted". I'm so tired of living in an era where every communication made by every organization feels like a lie
ignoramous 11 hours ago
> More details on the difference...
Does the qualifier "domestic" for mass surveillance mean that OpenAI allows the use of its models for whatever isn't "domestic"?
... Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force ...SpicyLemonZest 18 hours ago
You're quoting social media posts from a regime official who says he didn't participate in these negotiations and doesn't work for the relevant department.
If his characterization of the agreement is correct, which I will not believe and you should not believe until a trustworthy news outlet publishes the text, I suppose this would convince me that Hegseth does not literally plan to build a Terminator for democracy-ending purposes. There's a lot of inexcusable stuff here regardless, but perhaps merely boycotting OpenAI and the US military would be a sufficient response if this all checks out.
qwerasdf5 17 hours ago
> which I will not believe and you should not believe
It seems like you chose to immediately disbelieve it.
> until a trustworthy news outlet publishes the text
If you've found one of these, let me know. I'm still looking...
SpicyLemonZest 16 hours ago
cube00 19 hours ago
If the redlines are the same how'd this deal get struck?
ChatGPT maker OpenAI has the same redlines as Anthropic when it comes to working with the Pentagon, an OpenAI spokesperson confirmed to CNN.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/02/27/tech/openai-has-same-redl...
slim 14 hours ago
Look more carefully at what sam altman satd : he did not say he won't remove technical safeguards against surveilance and autonomous killing, instead he said "We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should"
nxobject 9 hours ago
> We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should
How surprised should I be that a government who’s consistently railed against “woke AI” isn’t caring about that?
spongebobstoes 15 hours ago
deals are based on personal relationships, not abstract logic
_zoltan_ 10 hours ago
huh? the same deal was offered to anthropic who decided not to take it.
otterley 7 hours ago
skybrian 19 hours ago
You're expecting logic from the Trump administration and that's not really how they do things. Maybe it was never about the redlines? Maybe they decided Anthropic was their enemy, and that was their excuse.
yoyohello13 18 hours ago
Anthropic was too public about being “good”. And if there is one thing the Trump admin cannot abide it’s morality.
spprashant 17 hours ago
Just uninstalled the app and canceled subscription. OpenAI can't justify their insane valuation without an user base. Especially when there are capable models elsewhere.
deaux 19 hours ago
All OpenAI employees during the board revolt that vouched for sama's return are personally responsible.
swat535 19 hours ago
OpenAI employees revolted for their millions worth of stock, not for principle.
Anyone thinking they have any virtue is naive.
Jcampuzano2 19 hours ago
I would put bets on the issue probably being that it was pointed out that Anthropic's models were used to assist the raid in Venezuela, Anthropic then aggressively doubled down on their rules/principles and the DOD didn't like being called out on that so they lashed out, hard.
If theres anything this admin doesn't like, its being postured against or called out by literally anyone, especially in public.
Monotoko 17 hours ago
I don't even think Anthropic balked at being used to assist, as long as a human has the final say.
push0ret 19 hours ago
So they agreed to the same red lines that had earlier led to the fallout with Anthropic? Kind of strange.
arppacket 19 hours ago
I bet Sam secretly pledged to DoD that the red lines were only temporary, for optics and to calm employees at the all hands meeting.
A few months down the line, OpenAI will quietly decide that their next model is safe enough for autonomous weapons, and remove their safeguard layer. The mass surveillance enablement might be an indirect deal through Palantir.
coliveira 18 hours ago
Very possible, double speaking is Sam Altman's specialty.
fatal94 7 hours ago
The fact they were able to strike a deal in the first place hours after Anthropic was declared a supply chain risk should make this obvious. Their employees are smart people, the only way they can reason past this is their compensation.
yoyohello13 19 hours ago
Sam saw Anthropic was getting too competitive. So he called his buddies in the gov to knock them down a peg.
coliveira 18 hours ago
That's very possible! In the last few days Anthropic was getting a lot of attention, and OpenAI was looking weaker in comparison. It seems like a politically coordinated job to remove competition.
Analemma_ 18 hours ago
For sure, he's been pissed that OpenAI no longer has the Mandate of Heaven and Claude is all anyone has been talking about since December. (And it's not just an ego thing: because OAI isn't profitable yet, they need the hype to keep going to raise money on favorable terms, so loss of buzz is an existential threat). I absolutely believe that he started making calls to try and get buddies in the White House to take Anthropic down.
harmonic18374 19 hours ago
I don't trust Sam to be telling the truth. It would be to his benefit to lie about this and make Anthropic look bad, so he of course would, even if it's not actually the case.
Jackson__ 14 hours ago
Hell, I would have thought it likely that anthropic was doing the same thing. Of course that was proven wrong, but for OAI I wouldn't even be guessing. This has always been what sama does.
fintechie 19 hours ago
Well you know how it goes... you need to read between the lines. I can agree with you on your "principles", but not enforce them myself.
fwlr 18 hours ago
It makes sense if you imagine the real motivation is “make sure the AI contracts go to my good friend Sam”, and all the red line stuff is just a way to pick a fight with Anthropic.
foobarqux 18 hours ago
No, the difference is that the government agrees to no "unlawful" use as determined by the government.
Anthropic said that mass surveillance was per se prohibited even if the government self-certified that it was lawful.
lathgan 19 hours ago
Follow the money. There is a UAE sheik who bought 49% of Trump's World Liberty and is involved in OpenAI's Project Stargate:
https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/35909013656801
I'm sure more will drop in the coming months.
davidw 19 hours ago
We need some kind of group like "tech people with morals". I'm done with these people and their corruption and garbage.
matsemann 15 hours ago
It's why I think "software engineer" is a misnomer. We don't have a license, we don't have an ethics code, we don't sign off on stuff. In other disciplines, an engineer could topple a project they feel is unsafe or against code, and be backed by their union if replaced. A software engineer just says yes if their stocks aren't vested, and will be replaced if not.
qudat 22 minutes ago
I just looked this up so might not be fully accurate but it seems most private sector “engineers” don’t require a license. You only need a PE license when providing a service to the public. That is quite a strict band on the title.
gyomu 11 hours ago
Where can I read more about all the licensed engineers toppling unethical military projects?
padolsey 15 hours ago
Not a group per se but I maintain an index of 'good' people in tech here, and their contraries - https://goodindex.org
latexr 13 hours ago
Sam has -6/100? How does that work? If you can go into the negatives, how low can you get?
hananova 11 hours ago
jakeydus 13 hours ago
A union?
seanclayton 7 hours ago
Unfortunately most engineers irrationally hate unions
fourside 6 hours ago
gota 10 hours ago
A guild. Control who learns the trade.
t0lo 18 hours ago
Yeah some new banner to organise around- the hard part is easily communicating you're an ethical technologist and finding others.
schoen 17 hours ago
Also, it's probably tricky to find a Schelling point that a broad range of people can agree to.
* no military use
* no lethal use
* no use in support of law enforcement
* no use in support of immigration enforcement
* no use in mass surveillance
* no use in domestic mass surveillance (but mass surveillance of foreigners is OK)
* no use in domestic surveillance
* no use in surveillance
* require independent audits
* require court oversight
* require company to monitor use
* require company to monitor use and divulge it to employees
* some other form of human rights monitoring or auditing
* some other form of restriction on theaters/conflicts/targets
* company will permit some of these uses (not purport to forbid them by license, contract, or ToS) but not customize software to facilitate them
* company can unilaterally block inappropriate uses
* company can publicly disclose uses it thinks are inappropriate
* some other form of remedy
* government literally has to explain why some uses are necessary or appropriate to reassure people developing capabilities, and they have some kind of ongoing bargaining power to push back
It feels normal to me that a lot of people would want some of those things, but kind of unlikely that they would readily agree on exactly which ones.
I even think there's a different intuition about the baseline because one version is "nobody works on weapons except for people who specifically make a decision to work for an arms company because they have decided that's OK according to their moral views" (working on weapons is an abnormal, deliberate decision) and another version is "every company might sell every technology as part of a weapons system or military application, and a few people then object because they've decided that's not OK according to their moral views" (refusing to work on weapons is an abnormal, deliberate decision). I imagine a fair number of people in computing fields effectively thought that the norm or default for their industry was the latter, because of the perception that there are "special" military contractors where people get security clearances and navigate military procurement processes, and most companies are not like that, so you were not working on any form of weapon unless you intentionally chose to do so. But, having just been to the Computer History Museum earlier this week, I also see that a lot of Silicon Valley companies have actually been making weapons systems for as long as there has been a Silicon Valley.
davidw 7 hours ago
t0lo 16 hours ago
lioeters 16 hours ago
"Starting today I will be asking prominent members of the tech community to sign their name onto this. A code of conduct, authored by me, that pledges them to a universal ethos, which I created, that I call tech ethics or Tethics for short."
curiousgal 13 hours ago
This, honestly. Seeing all those billionaires on inauguration day lined up to kiss the ring was utterly pathetic. Like what is the fucking point of having billions of dollars if you're just going to be someone else's bitch. And for what? A couple more billion dollars. Oof
KronisLV 9 hours ago
In an imaginary world, this would be a precursor to Anthropic coming to EU in a greater capacity and teaming up with Mistral, eventually leading to similar innovation and progress that DeepSeek forced upon the West, benefitting everyone in the long run. They seem to have the morals for it and the respect for human rights and life given their recent announcement (after some backtracking), unlike OpenAI. Sadly, that's not the real world.
tao_oat 9 hours ago
I'd apply to work for Anthropic in a heartbeat if it was a European company.
ozgung 13 hours ago
Do I understand this correctly:
An algorithm, an ML model trained to predict next tokens to write meaningful text, is going to KILL actual humans by itself.
So killing people is legal,
Killing people by a random process is legal,
A randomized algorithm deciding on who to kill is legal,
And some of you think you are legally protected because they used the word “domestic”?
boxedemp 4 hours ago
Killing people has been legal forever. But you have to do it at scale for it to be legal.
mpalmer 8 hours ago
I don't think you do?
Who said that any of it is legal? Keeping in mind that when the government does something, it usually takes more than 24h for there to be an official determination on whether they broke the law.
nsvd2 8 hours ago
Well, DHS has shown this year that they won't show restraint when it comes to attacking American citizens. I would expect that trend to continue.
booleandilemma 11 hours ago
Is it possible the killing machine could hallucinate and kill some random, innocent person?
sumeno 9 hours ago
It's incredibly unlikely that it won't do exactly that, although we'll be very lucky if it's just that and not a random, innocent city
boxedemp 4 hours ago
It's already happened in the Korean DMZ
phtrivier 7 hours ago
Verhoeven fans would simply call it "a glitch".
techpression 13 hours ago
Domestic means nothing, it’s like the company Daniel Ek invested in saying they won’t sell weapons to ”Democracies”, in the context of warfare and control these words are meaningless.
They will deploy this on a domestic scale and claim to use it to locate non-domestic threats. I can’t believe anyone is falling for this.
tintor 16 hours ago
Difference from Anthropic's deal is:
- OpenAI is ok with use of their AI for autonomous weapons, as long as there is "human responsibility"
- Anthropic is not ok with use of their AI for autonomous weapons
IAmGraydon 7 hours ago
I think you guys are giving far too much attention to the "autonomous weapons" angle and not enough to the "spying on Americans" angle. It makes no sense to use an LLM to power an autonomous weapon. It does make a lot of sense to use an LLM to monitor communications and public social media profiles to create a list of "domestic terrorists" that they can then target. I'm willing to bet this is what the administration wanted to use Anthropic for.
xiphias2 34 minutes ago
Sure, and actually the open models are already good enough to do that, it's not like any company could stop any organization that can collect the data from doing this.
They can just improve on it a lot.
pbnjay 18 hours ago
I had kept my Plus subscription just because I was lazy, and it was inexpensive and convenient… but this turn definitely helped me get off the fence. I am exporting and deleting my data now, and the cancellation is already done.
fiatpandas 17 hours ago
>human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems
So there’s the difference, and an erasure of a red line. OpenAI is good with autonomous weapon systems. Requiring human responsibility isn’t saying much. Theres already military courts, rules of engagement, and international rules of war.
ttrashh 17 hours ago
Cancel your subscription. It's the least you can do.
bodobolero 5 hours ago
I canceled my ChatGPT subscription and switched to Lumo Plus subscription https://lumo.proton.me/about I also considered https://mistral.ai/products/le-chat
Both are based in Europe but Proton Lumo has the better privacy promises.
Would be interested in experiences of others with those alternatives for question/answering type research (not for coding for which there exist other, better alternatives like Gemini and Claude)
xvector 5 hours ago
If you want privacy the only option that reasonably delivers is Moxie's https://confer.to
But tbh I just switched to Anthropic, they need all the support they can get. Claude is great for question/answer.
adangert 12 hours ago
Let me reiterate some points for people here:
Income and revenue sources always, inevitably, and without fail, determine behavior.
aoeusnth1 6 hours ago
I think your theory might be missing an extremely relevant and timely counterexample?
dgxyz 13 hours ago
Sam Altman being a complete bell end? Who'd have thought it.
I hope everyone goes and works for Anthropic and OpenAI collapses.
Markets going to be interesting on Monday. This plus a war. Urgh.
pu_pe 15 hours ago
So this week we've learned that even the government asseses Anthropic has the better model, and that OpenAI leadership has no concern for safety whatsoever.
operator_nil 19 hours ago
So does this mean that OpenAI will give whatever the DoD asks for and they will pinky swear that it won’t be used for mass surveillance and autonomous killing machines?
insane_dreamer 18 hours ago
yes
and we know we can trust openAI because they were founded on "open" and "safe" AI (up until they realized how much money there was to be made, at which point their only value changed to "make money")
AbstractH24 18 hours ago
It’s amazing how quickly the players keep shifting here.
Yesterday and the day before sentiment seemed to be focused on “Anthropic selling out”, then that shifted to “Anthropic holds true to its principles in a David vs Goliath” and “the industry will rally around one another for the greater good.” But suddenly we’re seeing a new narrative of “Evil OpenAI swoops in to make a deal with the devil.”
Reminds of that weekend where Sam Altman lost control of OpenAI.
deepfriedbits 17 hours ago
"There are decades where nothing happens and weeks where decades happen."
karmasimida 18 hours ago
Sam is a player and honestly the more interesting one in the whole thing.
Mad respect to Sam, now I believe OpenAI have better chance to win in the race
Sl1mb0 18 hours ago
> Mad respect to Sam
And people wonder how we got here.
AbstractH24 18 hours ago
He’s certainly solidified his place in the history of this era.
But I suspect the public sentiment will eventually turn against him. When society sets its pitchforks on big tech he’ll be the poster boy. A 21st century John D. Rockefeller.
Him, Musk, Bezos, and Zuck.
webdevver 11 hours ago
webdevver 11 hours ago
absolute truth nuke and the hysteria around it is yet more evidence that HN is a negative signal.
anything HN countersignals, go long on.
insane_dreamer 18 hours ago
Hitler won the race in the 1930s too. Totally crushed it.
AbstractH24 18 hours ago
slibhb 18 hours ago
I'm unsure how to feel about this whole dust-up. It doesn't seem like much has changed in substance. Maybe OpenAI outmaneuvered Anthropic behind the scenes. Possibly Anthropic was seen as not behaving deferentially enough towards the government. But this administration has proven comically corrupt, so it wouldn't surprise me if money was involved. Will be interested to see what journalists turn up.
vander_elst 12 hours ago
Subscribers should be aware what they are supporting. I think that keeping an OpenAI account can be considered an active support of this decision, at least for private people who can easily change providers.
fabbbbb 3 hours ago
Anyone having success with exporting data from ChatGPT? Got the export email 11 hours ago but still no download link..
taway1874 2 hours ago
Well ... bumped up my Claude subscription from Pro to Max and closed out my OpenAI accounts. It's a drop in the ocean but I'll sleep better knowing I did the right thing. Thanks ChatGPT! It was good knowing you.
kledru 12 hours ago
Sorry, despite the public statements of some sort of solidarity with Anthropic by sama this looks like a plot to take over from losing position.
Sadly it would be very difficult for Anthropic to relocate to another country with their IP, models, and infrastructure.
(Guess I need to build everything I intended this year in a weekend.)
gammarator 6 hours ago
I would not be surprised if Sam A. helped engineer this whole situation… “Child’s play,” like replacing a reddit ceo.
gammarator 3 hours ago
jordanscales 19 hours ago
This is awkward? https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47188473
BoiledCabbage 19 hours ago
So they agreed to the exact same clauses that Anthropic put forward but with OpenAI instead?
So it wasn't about those principles making them a supply chain risk? They're just trying to punish Anthropic for being the first ones to stand firm on those principles?
yoyohello13 19 hours ago
I’m sure a big donor just used the US gov as a bludgeon to destroy their competition
eclipticplane 19 hours ago
Jensson 18 hours ago
Anthropic would probably not renegotiate in a year about the principles, while Sam Altman is known to be morally flexible so OpenAI will almost surely allow the military to do what they want in the future. Sam Altman might even have said behind closed doors that these restrictions will be removed once the drama has died down.
small_model 10 hours ago
What principals do Anthropic have?, they happily build a product and acknowledge it will lead to the loss of millions of jobs, particularly SWE's first, but shrug and say 'nothing we can do, we just build the thing', that will kill a lot of people.
iainctduncan 18 hours ago
Did anyone ever doubt sama would just follow the money?
weasels gonna weasel
mmanfrin 17 hours ago
Absolute disgrace of a person and organization.
rich_sasha 19 hours ago
Is the Pentagon signing a EULA confirming all their data will now be used, anonymised, for improving the service?
wmf 18 hours ago
Obviously not? You know enterprise customers don't have the same EULA as consumers, right?
matsemann 15 hours ago
From an open non-profit to a war machine in such a short time is baffling.
e40 15 hours ago
This is how OpenAI gets bailed out in an AI crash, too big to fail becomes too important to fail.
corford 19 hours ago
If you're unhappy with this, an immediate way to signal it is with your wallet. In my case I've just uninstalled chatgpt from my phone, cancelled my subscription and will up my spend with anthropic.
willio58 18 hours ago
Thanks for the reminder. Doing the same now.
The little respect I had left for Sam is now wiped. Makes me sick.
Growing up I always thought AI would be this beautiful tool, this thing that opens the gates to a new society where work becomes optional in a way. But I failed to think about human greed.
I remember following OpenAI way back when it was a non profit explaining how AI uncontrolled could be highly detrimental. Now Sam has not only taken that non profit and made it for-profit. It seems he’s making the most evil decisions he can for a buck.
Cancel your subscription, tell your friends to. And vote to heavily tax these companies and their leaders.
mythz 18 hours ago
Perfect timing - Had already cancelled my Claude sub over their OAuth ban in external tools and was about to pick up a Codex sub as the next best alternative.
Ended up renewing my Claude sub today instead. Principled stances matter and I no longer trust OpenAI to be trustworthy custodians of my AI History.
afruitpie 18 hours ago
Just canceled my subscription! I immediately received an email with the subject “We’d love your feedback on why you canceled your ChatGPT plus subscription” and a link to a survey.
I linked to https://notdivided.org/ as the reasoning why.
AbstractH24 18 hours ago
I’d like to say I did that but I already canceled my subscription 4 months ago in favor of Claude and Gemini based purely on product quality.
Was shocking back then to think how far we’ve come.
adverbly 18 hours ago
Deleted all chats and deleted my account.
a_victorp 16 hours ago
I tried doing that but I'm certain they didn't delete it, because I tried logging in after a week and it worked
rrrpdx1 17 hours ago
Totally agree. Signed up for a claude code account and will not give OpenAI any money in the future. Let's see what Google does. I will definitely vote with my wallet.
fandorin 7 hours ago
Same here. Removed my account, deleted the app.
cjonas 18 hours ago
Thanks for reminding me. Been meaning to cancel for months.
mrcwinn 18 hours ago
I canceled my subscription, wiped my history, closed my account, deleted the app. Using Claude Max.
IAmGraydon 16 hours ago
Yep I’m pulling the plug on my OIA account on Monday morning and switching to Anthropic.
outside1234 17 hours ago
Exactly. Stop using OpenAI. Don’t design it into your software at work. Use Claude. Screw these guys.
ckemere 18 hours ago
Same
outside1234 17 hours ago
Just deleted OpenAI account, F these guys
slopinthebag 18 hours ago
Personally I'm happy about this. OpenAI are being fair about letting the gov use their models to spy on everybody, doesn't seem right that Americans get a pass.
nearlyepic 18 hours ago
Do you honestly believe that cancelling a subscription makes a bit of difference to a company that is either committing accounting fraud on a monumental scale or shoveling venture capital money into a furnace? not to mention the whole collaborating with a fascist government thing.
taking real action is your choice, but stop pretending this kind of thing matters one iota
edit: to be clear, i'm not advocating for nihilism, but tricking yourself into thinking you made a difference to make yourself feel better isn't the play either
mythz 18 hours ago
It absolutely matters, especially when done in unison like this.
Cancelling ChatGPT sends a signal that you don't agree with weaponizing AI. Switching to Claude says you support Anthropic's principled stance against it. If you have a strong opinion either way, today is the day to vote with your wallet.
Dismissing every small action as meaningless is just apathy and how nothing ever changes.
in_cahoots 17 hours ago
utopiah 16 hours ago
sriram_malhar 17 hours ago
What has an impact is cancelling a subscription and then talking about it. The media will amplify it the pushback. The goal is to make the name OpenAI and ChatGPT toxic, that whatever you do will be converted into a technology that will surveil or bomb you.
coliveira 18 hours ago
At least I'm not getting my hands dirty.
biophysboy 18 hours ago
Yes? Earnings matter to investors
gonzalohm 18 hours ago
Analemma_ 18 hours ago
I think you have too much pessimism. It's not guaranteed to work, but as I mentioned in another thread, since around December, Claude (and Gemini to a lesser extent) has had all the buzz in tech circles, while Chat-GPT has seemed like the also-ran. And that matters: decision-makers in companies notice these things and momentum becomes self-reinforcing (you use Claude Code because everyone else uses Claude Code). If a large enough group of developers visibly defects from OpenAI because of this, it definitely could have consequences. It's not a sure thing, but it's far from hopeless.
I was not a Chat-GPT user even before this, but I'm bumping my Claude Code subscription to the next tier up. Fuck OpenAI.
Sl1mb0 18 hours ago
> but stop pretending this kind of thing matters one iota
This is blatantly false and intellectually dishonest. Of course it matters. Your edit is also wrong; you are advocating for nihilism with statments like these.
idiotsecant 17 hours ago
It's the only thing that matters. These companies don't follow the rules of capitalism physics. They live or die on vibes alone and the tech community abandoning them en masse is bad for the vibes. Once they lose the vibes they are Wiley Coyote looking down at the canyon below.
deadbolt 17 hours ago
Choosing to go along with calling it the "Department of War" tells you all you need to know.
netsroht 15 hours ago
Remember when openai was too afraid to release the full GPT-2 model (this one had only 1.5B params) because humanity apparently wasn't ready for it. Look where we are just a couple of years later. I really admired them back in the day for openai gym and PPO etc.
wannabe_loser 15 hours ago
I guess we aren't curing cancer with ai anymore
TeeWEE 9 hours ago
If you work at OpenAI, leave now while you can.
jdiaz97 17 hours ago
cancelling my openai subscription, they're gonna miss my 20 USD
insane_dreamer 18 hours ago
I'm never using an OpenAI model or Codex ever again. Period. Idaf whether it scores better than Claude on benchmarks or not.
This is a red line for me. It's clear OpenAI has zero values and will give Hesgeth whatever he wants in exchange for $$$.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/27/technology/openai-reaches...
SpaceL10n 12 hours ago
Does deploying these models in "the classified network" also mean this technology is going to be used to help kill people?
impulser_ 17 hours ago
For the people that don't understand how they got a deal with the same redlines, it probably because OpenAI agreed to not question them. The safeguards are there, both parties agree now fuck off and let us use your model how we see fit.
Anthropic probably made the mistake of questioning the Military's activities related to Claude after the Venezuela mission and wanted reassurance that the model wouldn't be used for the redlines, and the military didn't like this and told them we aren't using your models unless you agree to not question us and then the back and forth started.
In the end, we will probably have both OpenAI and Anthropic providing AI to the military and that's a good thing. I don't think they will keep the supply chain risk on Anthropic for more than a week.
Monotoko 17 hours ago
Anthropic vs OpenAI will probably be The Machine vs Samaritan
(Person Of Interest for those who haven't seen it, watched it a decade ago and it's actually quite surprising how on point it ended up being)
xvector 15 hours ago
> I don't think they will keep the supply chain risk on Anthropic for more than a week.
Why? It is in the admin's interest to absolutely destroy Anthropic. Make them an example.
impulser_ an hour ago
Because once Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and all their contractors call to tell them they need Anthropic they will drop it.
bambax 13 hours ago
> In all of our interactions, the DoW displayed a deep respect for safety
Right. Pete "FAFO" Hegseth is a model of intelligence, moderation, and respect for due process. Nothing to see here.
nahuel0x 2 hours ago
Remember that the US administration is supporting Israel on the ethnic-cleansing and genocide of Gaza, using Palantir technology and AI systems that generate kill lists. It's "IBM and the Holocaust" all over again.
throwaway20261 11 hours ago
It is quite shocking that almost all AI companies are saying "we are not ok with domestic surveillance" but they'll happily sign up to surveilling the rest of the world population.
So by that measure the US govt can go get some Israeli software to surveill their domestic populace!
Homo sapiens deserve to become extinct.
vldszn 7 hours ago
jaybrendansmith 4 hours ago
What part of "These people are fascists, and need to be stopped" are people failing to understand?
boxedemp 4 hours ago
The part about money
levanten 15 hours ago
Funny that these are the same people that have been blasting the alarm on dangers of AI singularity. Now they cannot wait to put their tools in weapons.
kneel 7 hours ago
Chatgpt has an export function for all of your chats
Use it to save your data, shouldn't be hard to get it working elsewhere
darkstarsys 9 hours ago
All of this, the news articles, the social media discussion, this very discussion, will be part of the training set for future AIs. What will they learn from this?
AmericanOP 18 hours ago
Instant uninstall.
kseniamorph 12 hours ago
Is there anyone who really understands what’s different about the OpenAI agreement? Or maybe these are just Sam Altman’s public statements that don’t actually reflect the real terms of the deal. I honestly can’t figure it out.
imwideawake 12 hours ago
Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic should all have each other's backs when it comes to hard lines like this. Sam can say whatever he wants, but signing this deal on the same day Trump and Hegseth went scorched earth on Anthropic — for standing up for the very values OpenAI claims to hold — is sleazy.
Screw Sam, and screw OpenAI. I've been a customer of theirs since the first month their API opened to developers. Today I cancelled my subscription and deleted my account.
I'd already signed up for Claude Max and had been slow to cancel my OpenAI subscriptions. This finally made the decision easy.
lm28469 13 hours ago
> OpenAI CEO Sam Altman shares Anthropic’s concerns when it comes to working with the Pentagon
The same day:
Pssst psst Samy Samy, come here we have money and data psst
> Tonight, we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network.
petee 11 hours ago
This explains the "Free Codex" offer i just got in my email
elAhmo 19 hours ago
All that money and not a single ounce of integrity.
vorticalbox 7 hours ago
> prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance
so foreign mass surveillance is all good?
superkuh 19 hours ago
I have just canceled all services and deleted my account with OpenAI. They can get money from the current US regime but I will not contribute to their violations of the constitution.
jstummbillig 16 hours ago
> Surely if OpenAI had insisted upon the same things that Anthropic had, the government would not have signed this agreement.
Under normal circumstances, that would seem really plausible. But given how far Trump continues to go just out of spite and to project power, it actually is the opposite.
I am fully prepared to believe that they got absolutely nothing else out of it (to date).
matsemann 15 hours ago
OpenAI was the biggest donor ($25 millions) to Trumps campaign. This is them getting their back scratched in return.
m4rtink 18 hours ago
So this is indeed how OpenAI survives (a little bit longer ?) - government bailout.
interestpiqued 19 hours ago
What a snake
otterley 7 hours ago
The stories I’ve been reading say that the DoW’s agreement with OpenAI contain the very same limitations as the agreement with Anthropic did. In other words, they pressured Anthropic to eliminate those restrictions, Anthropic declined, then they made a huge fuss calling them “a radical left, woke company,” put them on the supply-chain risk list, then went with OpenAI even though OpenAI isn’t changing anything either.
The whole story makes no sense to me. The DoW didn’t get what they wanted, and now Anthropic is tarred and feathered.
https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/trump-will-end-government-use-of...
“OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman said the company’s deal with the Defense Department includes those same prohibitions on mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, as well as technical safeguards to make sure the models behave as they should.”
redml 14 hours ago
regardless of your opinion of ai in government, sam could not have picked a worse way for optics to swoop in and make a deal. it just looks incredibly bad.
DebtDeflation 9 hours ago
At this point it seems the entire AI Safety/Ethics debate was nothing more than a Marketing campaign to hype up the capabilities of the models - get people to think that if they're potentially dangerous that must mean they're so capable and they need to sign up for a subscription.
owenthejumper 10 hours ago
Well in the end this is great news - this virtually guarantees Anthropic win in the court.
d--b 18 hours ago
At this stage, everything OpenAi does is to try to keep investors investing.
They’re willing to let their brand go to trash for this government contract.
Pretty much every American is standing with Anthropic on this. No one left or right wants mass surveillance and terminators. In fact, no one in the world wants this, except the US military.
But Altman seems so desperate to keep the cash coming he’s ready to do anything.
LarsDu88 16 hours ago
China has evacuated its embassies in Iran.
This is really about the imminent strike on Iran which is now super telegraphed. They are gonna use ChatGPT for target selection, and the likely outcome is that it will fuck things up and a bunch of civilians are going to die because of this decision.
When this happens, Altman will go from being merely a drifter to having blood on his hands.
voganmother42 8 hours ago
OpenAI in action: https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2026/2/28/israel-strikes-...
greenchair 9 hours ago
speaking of blood on their hands, they are fighting multiple lawsuits related to suicide advice chats.
coffeebeqn 16 hours ago
Why would they use chatgpt for target selection?
LarsDu88 15 hours ago
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps has over 200,000 personnel. There are thousands of putative SAM sites and MANPAD launch sites. The amount of data to crunch is significant.
Alternatively, the DoW is simply incompetent and Trump or Hegseth wants to use AI to draft war plans.
bibabaloo 14 hours ago
cogman10 16 hours ago
Iran, Cuba, and to classify people as "Antifa".
A lot of innocent people are about to be harmed because the cogs of fascism are lubricated with blood.
LarsDu88 15 hours ago
The Iran situation is unique. If it is true that Epstein was part of a blackmailing operation run by Israeli intelligence, then the time to act is limited. It may only be a matter of time before the US-Israel special relationship begins to deteriorate, especially as the House of Representatives starts digging into what was going on.
For hardline right wing Israeli government officials who would be privy to such information, the window of time to leverage to US to enact regime change on the Islamic Republic is closing. The survival of Israel over the long run really depends on not having a hardline Islamic regime in Iran developing nuclear weapons. Things like AI safety and US elections are secondary to such prerogatives. The question for voters in the US is whether it really is worth it to the average US citizen to shed blood and tax dollars for this stuff.
I hope there can be a peaceful regime change in Iran and that there will be peaceful relations with Iran and Israel in the future. But damn I wish things could go back to normal with our US political system once this is all settled.
mrweasel 12 hours ago
Didn't the department of war announce that it would be working with xAI just this past December?
straydusk 18 hours ago
I know the reaction to this, if you're a rational observer, is "OpenAI have cut corners or made concessions that Anthropic did not, that's the only thing that makes sense."
However, if you live in the US and pay a passing attention to our idiotic politics, you know this is right out of the Trump playbook. It goes like this:
* Make a negotiation personal
* Emotionally lash out and kill the negotiation
* Complete a worse or similar deal, with a worse or similar party
* Celebrate your worse deal as a better deal
Importantly, you must waste enormous time and resources to secure nothing of substance.
That's why I actually believe that OpenAI will meet the same bar Anthropic did, at least for now. Will they continue to, in the same way Anthropic would have? Seems unlikely, but we'll see.
voganmother42 8 hours ago
If you support openai, you support this admin, simple as
ocdtrekkie 18 hours ago
Another good question: If OpenAI knew Anthropic wasn't a competitor... was the price higher? Will the federal government also pay more for a worse product?
straydusk 18 hours ago
You'd have to think so. They're really the only serious player left - I doubt Google would want to be involved, and xAI is a significant step down.
coryodaniel 3 hours ago
Don’t just cancel, flood them with CCPA requests.
hnthrowaway0315 18 hours ago
Ah, is it the time when Skynet starts to manifest itself...
tibbydudeza 10 hours ago
While Dario is not my hero with the sometimes the outrageous things he says he has a firm moral compass and a backbone that aligns with mine and thus I will support his company and their products in my personal use and my work.
mkozlows 18 hours ago
So there are two possibilities here:
1. There's no substantive change. Hegseth/Trump just wanted to punish Anthropic for standing up to them, even if it didn't get them anything else today -- establishing a chilling effect for the future has some value for them in this case, after all. And OpenAI was willing to help them do that, despite earlier claiming that they stood behind Anthropic's decisions.
2. There is a substantive change. Despite Altman's words, they have a tacit understanding that OpenAI won't really enforce those terms, or that they'll allow them to be modified some time in the future when attention has moved on elsewhere.
Either way, it makes Altman look slimy, and OpenAI has aligned with Trump against Anthropic in a place where Anthropic made a correct principled stand. It's been clear for a while that Anthropic has more ethics than OpenAI, but this is more naked than any previous example.
slopinthebag 18 hours ago
> OpenAI has aligned with Trump against Anthropic in a place where Anthropic made a correct principled stand.
Just to be clear, you believe that the correct, principled stand is that it's OK to use their models for killing people and civilian surveillance?
Both OAI and Anthropic have the same moral leg to stand on here, OAI is just not hypocritical about it.
mkozlows 18 hours ago
If you believe that any country should have a military and intelligence apparatus, the job of that apparatus is to kill people and surveil foreigners. I do think the US government should have a military and intelligence apparatus. Therefore, any company that works with it, from suppliers of clothing and food to suppliers of compute and AI, are supporting an organization with that mission.
The US military _does not_ need to build autonomous weapon systems and _should not_ surveil US citizens broadly.
outside1234 17 hours ago
Screw OpenAI. Never opening that app again or using one of their models.
dataflow 18 hours ago
This seems full of loopholes.
> The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.
(1) Well, did both sides sign the agreement and is it actually effective? Or is it still sitting on someone's desk until it can get stalled long enough?
(2) What does "agreement" even mean? Is it a legally enforceable contract, or just some sort of MoU or pinkie promise?
(3) If it's a legally enforceable contract, is it equally enforceable on all of their contracts, or just some? Do they not have existing contracts this would need to apply to?
(4) What does "reflects them in law and policy" even mean? Since when does DoW make laws, and in what sense do their laws reflect whatever the agreement was? Are these laws he can point to so everyone else can see? Can he at least copy-paste the exact sentences the government agreed to?
t0lo 19 hours ago
Snakes- as predicted
rvz 19 hours ago
Not a surprise here, that letter was a trap for OpenAI employees who filled it out with their names on it. [0]
The ones that did might as well leave. But there was no open letter when the first military contract was signed. [1] Now there is one?
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47176170
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jun/17/openai-mi...
midnitewarrior 17 hours ago
Opportunism without principles at its finest.
brainzap 10 hours ago
the AI datacenter built for 180B are used for surveillance and control
weare138 5 hours ago
There's was an 80s movie about this...
verdverm 21 hours ago
If the "safety stack" (guardrails) bit is true, it's the exact opposite of their beef with Anthropic... which is not surprising given who's running the US right now.
I always assumed those folks need a way to look strong with their base for a media moment over equitable application of the policies or law.
arendtio 15 hours ago
So now we are waiting for Anthropic to explain to us what Sam agreed to and what they rejected.
On the surface, it looks like both rejected 'domestic mass surveillance' and 'autonomous weapon systems', but there seem to be important differences in the fine print, since one company is being labeled a 'supply chain risk' while the other 'reached the patriotic and correct answer'.
One explanation would be that the DoW changed its demands, but I doubt that. Instead, I believe OpenAI found a loophole that allows those cases under certain conditions.
robertwt7 19 hours ago
How did they agree to the terms that were initially put forward by Anthropic but with OpenAI? Surely there’s a catch here. Or is it just Sam negotiation skill?
drivebyhooting 18 hours ago
In my experience ChatGPT is the most sanctimonious of the leading models.
When I need advice for my clandestine operations I always reach for Grok.
tayo42 15 hours ago
How do llms get used in either survalience or for autonomous weapons. Using written English seems so inefficient?
_zoltan_ 10 hours ago
to all the naysayers: what did all these people doing AI research expect? that the military doesn't want to use their stuff? and then when it does, Pikachu face?
I know I'll get down voted but come on, this is so very naive.
looksjjhg 16 hours ago
So it’s personal basically
camillomiller 17 hours ago
Sam Altman is this. Sam Altman needs to be stopped.
FrustratedMonky 9 hours ago
Maybe the problem here is they are negotiating by using social media posts. Where is the team of Anthropic people, and the team of Gov people, that should be in a room somewhere doing this in private?
AmericanOP 18 hours ago
Department of War just killed OpenAI's brand
dakolli 18 hours ago
They're pretending like they didn't enter into this agreement last January and are completely entrenched in intelligence programs already. They are trying to make it look like they are stepping up in a time of need (time of need for the DoD), in reality they sold their soul to intelligence and the military a year ago.
I posted about this here after Sam made his tweet:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47189756
Source: https://defensescoop.com/2025/01/16/openais-gpt-4o-gets-gree...
_alternator_ 7 hours ago
So while Sam Altman claims that OAI received promises not to have fully automated killbot-GPT from Hegseth, so did Anthropic(!)—but it contained weasel legal language that allowed the USG to ignore the restrictions at will. (We all know how the current admin reads such language.)
So until we see the contract I think it’s fair to assume that OAI and Anthropic got roughly the same deal, with Anthropic insisting on language that actually limits the government, while OAI licked the boot and is passing it off like filet mignon.
skygazer 17 hours ago
Perhaps Trump's DOD objects specifically to Anthropic models themselves declining to do immoral and illegal things, and not something just stipulated in an ignorable contract. That would give room for Sam to throw some public CYA into a contract, while neutering model safety to their requirements.
webdevver 12 hours ago
TOTAL ALTMAN VICTORY
utopiah 16 hours ago
Oh yeah, from the company which raison d'etre was being open and being good.
shocked pikachu face
Come on by now we all know the only thing Altman (who else is still at OpenAI from the start?) wants it more money and more power, it doesn't really matter how.
jackyli02 19 hours ago
SA is a real weasel lol. Acted like he stood behind Anthropic's principles just to announce the deal with DoW a few hours later.
MGriisser 19 hours ago
Sam Altman not being consistently candid or truthful would be the shock of the century.
resters 10 hours ago
There will be a scene in some future movie about Trump's authoritarian rise (we are still early in it) that shows Sam signing this agreement. Sam will be played by a character actor meant to symbolize silicon valley opportunism and greed.
What sam and greg don't realize is that the many who succumb to trump's pressure tactics will all be lumped into the same category by history.
Sam and Greg are handing an authoritarian regime that has broken so many laws in the past year a superweapon.
transcriptase 18 hours ago
Sam must not be aware of what happened to any business or foreign nation/leader considered outwardly friendly to the first Trump administration when the democrats regained control in 2020.
yoyohello13 18 hours ago
You’re assuming democrats will ever be allowed to regain control.
resfirestar 17 hours ago
If they earnestly believe in fast ASI timelines then political grudges have to be pretty low on OAI's list of worries about 2029.
croes 14 hours ago
Is OpenAI and ChatGPT nie a national security threat for other countries?
khalic 13 hours ago
Their models are crappy anyway, the "super intelligence" BS is nowhere to be seen. Just let them die or become a US government asset.
gaigalas 18 hours ago
We really need a plan for the scenario in which the US loses the trade war and decides to go homicidal AI on the whole world. Like, help them recover or something.
lefrenchy 18 hours ago
This will backfire on Sam someday, he’s just a pawn in the agenda of the Trump admin.
abraxas 18 hours ago
I hope so but I am less optimistic. The oligarchy in Russia who remained loyal to the Putin regime have done just fine for decades as long as they did not attempt to overthrow the dictator. The regime in Washington is basically constructing the same type of kleptocracy and very little evidence is there that anyone who matters will get in their way. So far as I can tell the country is already a form of authoritarian regime where the loyalty to the supreme ruler is the main parameter of conducting business there.
rambojohnson 5 hours ago
get fucked OpenAI. cancelled my subscription.
riazrizvi 15 hours ago
Refreshing sanity.
romulussilvia 17 hours ago
I wonder if this will cause this to save open ai from the bubble! i am sure i am wrong;-)
SilverElfin 19 hours ago
So basically Greg Brockman of OpenAI, currently the largest MAGA PAC donor, used his bribe to make the government destroy his main competition? I’m absolutely cancelling ChatGPT and will tell everyone I know to cancel as well.
I also absolutely do not trust sleezy Sam Altman when he claims he has the same exact redlines as Anthropic:
> AI safety and wide distribution of benefits are the core of our mission. Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.
If Hegseth and Trump attack Anthropic and sign a deal with OpenAI under the same restrictions, it means this is them corrupting free markets by picking which companies win. Maybe it’s at the behest of David Sacks, the corrupt AI czar who complained about lawfare throughout the Biden administration but now cheers on far worse lawfare.
So it’s either a government looking to surveil citizens illegally or a government that is deeply corrupt and is using its power to enrich some people above others.
Uptrenda 15 hours ago
is there a single thing left that altman promised that he hasn't broken with this company...
apexalpha 15 hours ago
"We will not be divided!"
They got divided 12 hours later, lol.
0xfedbee 16 hours ago
Honestly not even surprised. What else could you expect from a zionist?
pluc 10 hours ago
lol it didn't even take them a whole night.
neuroelectron 14 hours ago
Sam Altman is a psychopath and his only talent is lying to people and convincing them of his lies.
saos 16 hours ago
Musk 100% right about this guy
ares623 12 hours ago
Is this setting the stage for a bailout? Was the whole thing between the three parties smoke and mirrors to justify a bailout down the line? It's conspiracy theory territory but, you know who we're dealing with here.
calvinmorrison 18 hours ago
perhaps us mere mortals should petition our lawmakers to ban mass surveillance.
angoragoats 7 hours ago
It’s the Department of Defense, and let’s not have the main post be a link to the non-consensual-porn-generating and Nazi-supporting site. Could an admin change the main link to the Fortune article also linked here?
mrcwinn 18 hours ago
So nice of him! I am sure he believes they should offer these terms to all competitors.
HN: if you continue to subscribe to OpenAI, if you use it at your startup, you’re no better than the tech bros you often criticize. This is not surprising but beyond shady.
ukblewis 10 hours ago
Thank you Sam Altman for being a man with a good sense of ethics and empowering the US Military while it fights evil in Iran and empowering the US government and ignoring the idiotic haters
cwyers 18 hours ago
There's a lot of people in this thread that assume that Sam Altman is the one who is being dishonest here, and I kind of understand, but the other two parties who could just as easily be lying are Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump, and of the three of them if you think sama is the _most_ likely to lie I feel like you have not been paying attention.
eoskx 19 hours ago
"Tonight, we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network.
In all of our interactions, the DoW displayed a deep respect for safety and a desire to partner to achieve the best possible outcome.
AI safety and wide distribution of benefits are the core of our mission. Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.
We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should, which the DoW also wanted. We will deploy FDEs to help with our models and to ensure their safety, we will deploy on cloud networks only.
We are asking the DoW to offer these same terms to all AI companies, which in our opinion we think everyone should be willing to accept. We have expressed our strong desire to see things de-escalate away from legal and governmental actions and towards reasonable agreements.
We remain committed to serve all of humanity as best we can. The world is a complicated, messy, and sometimes dangerous place."
moogly 16 hours ago
> We remain committed to serve all of humanity as best we can.
Serve Palestinians volleys of rockets, that is.
mythz 19 hours ago
Sam is just about the least trustworthy person in AI, I don't trust his words as face value and I consider these weasel words:
> prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility *for the use of force*
propagandist 18 hours ago
That means autonomous killbots are a-ok. Human responsibility is not the same as human decision-making.
The president or anybody at DoD can be "responsible", and we know there will be zero accountability. The courts defer to the executive, and Congress is all-too-happy for the executive to take the flak for their wars.
skeledrew 18 hours ago
> We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should
A bold statement. It would appear they've definitively solved prompt injection and all the other ills that LLMs have been susceptible to. And forgot to tell the world about it.
/s
mrcwinn 18 hours ago
Hey dang I know I’m not allowed to say this due to community guidelines, but Sam Altman is a lying sack of shit.
gurumeditations 9 hours ago
The “Department of War” does not exist and no one should use their preferred pronouns.
charcircuit 14 hours ago
I am glad OpenAI stood up to do what's right and give the American people the ability to choose how AI is used for themselves rather than dictating it from their high horse.
Edit: It looks like the terms are similar in OpenAI's deal in what they prohibit so it isn't clear why they are any better. We should be the ones dictating what is and isn't prohibited. Not Sam. We will have to wait for more news on what is actually different.
Kim_Bruning 11 hours ago
Any government is allowed to choose to do whatever it wants however it wishes; in a republic: given what is legally determined by the three branches. Obviously. They can contract with whomever they want, make any deal with whomever they want.
This also means that they should adhere to a deal once it is signed. That's part of the law too. They shouldn't suddenly turn around and try to alter the deal, then retaliate against their deal partner when they say "that wasn't the deal". You can't just go and answer: "Pray we don't alter it further".
The government of a nation sets the example for others, and should be scrupulous in their dealings.
charcircuit 10 hours ago
Just because you sign a deal that didn't mean you can't change it or terminate it in the future. As long as both parties agree any contract can be modified or terminated. If they don't usually the contract contains information on how it works.
Kim_Bruning 10 hours ago
raincole 14 hours ago
Yeah. And they are losing money from inference (HN told me so) so the US government is subsidizing our token usage!
charcircuit 13 hours ago
OpenAI is not losing money from inference. HN has told you the opposite repeatedly.
raincole 13 hours ago
Robdel12 19 hours ago
Raise your hand if you actually read it or if you read the title and replied? I see a lot of comments that sure seem like they didn’t read it.
> Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.
IF this is true, it SHOULD be verifiable. So, we wait? I mean, I am a dummy, but that language doesn’t seem too washy too me? Either it’s a bold face lie and OpenAI burns because of it or it’s true and the Trump admin is going after the “left” AI company. Or whatever. My point is, someone smarter than me/us is going to fact check Sam’s claim.
anon-3988 18 hours ago
> Either it’s a bold face lie and OpenAI burns because of it
Do you really still genuinely believe in this? This is the same person that said ads is going to be the last resort, and yet we are getting ads. I just don't understand how people can trust a single word coming out of folks like Sam, Musk, Trump or whoever rich asshole.
I listen to these people talk and they literally do not have souls. They will say whatever it is they need to get ahead. I watched a couple of Sam speeches and videos, the man does not have anything interesting to say.
anigbrowl 17 hours ago
1-800-Come-on-now
DoW: WOKE Antropic tried to impose their 'values' on us? Friendship ended!! National security risk!
OpenAI: We just signed a deal that's strong on values, the exact same ones as Anthropic, no way we would mislead anyone about this
You: Seems legit
SpicyLemonZest 18 hours ago
The problem is that many of those would-be fact checkers have massive incentives to lie about it. So regardless of whether it is true, you're going to see a number of detailed and well-researched pieces over the weekend arguing that Altman is right and this whole thing is Anthropic's fault. The set of people who could cause OpenAI to burn and the set of people who have millions of dollars riding on its success substantially overlap; it may not take a particularly good argument to convince them.
Robdel12 18 hours ago
Yeah, you’re right. I’m overly hopeful and naïve
Edit: as soon as I hit submit I realized this might sound condescending, but I actually mean this lol
SpicyLemonZest 18 hours ago
recursivecaveat 14 hours ago
I mean, this is a company literally named "Open"AI, nominally a non-profit or whatever. I think they will survive quietly opening an endpoint for their customer. Unlikely anyone is under enough illusions about Sama's moral character to be scandalized by deception.
jrflowers 18 hours ago
I like the idea of seeing someone post “I dislike and distrust Sam Altman” and thinking “They must be saying that because they haven’t read the things that he writes”
operator_nil 18 hours ago
Do you know who isn't a dummy? Sam. The crucial part of that statement is that the DoD will use OpenAI systems "lawfully and responsibly," which I don't doubt is written somewhere in their contract. However, those terms are so open-ended that it's impossible for OpenAI to enforce. Sam could have clarified in his tweet that they explicitly prohibited the use of their technology for mass surveillance and autonomous killings, but he deliberately chose not to and to simply say, "We told them not to do bad things." which smells like bullshit
Robdel12 18 hours ago
I guess I’m hanging on what
> reflects them in law
Means exactly. What law and what does it say?
I’m also sure he quietly bent the knee, but I want to know what “law and policy” it’s being reflected in to know.
layer8 17 hours ago
ImPostingOnHN 15 hours ago
"The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement" is incredibly wishy washy.
What does it even mean to reflect those principles in law? Did they pass a law that says they can't do it? Which one?
What does it mean to "put them into our agreement"? Did they just have a section in the appendix listing various principles, or is there agreement from both parties to not violate those principles? What system does the contract specify for verification of compliance?
nateburke 11 hours ago
Plain and simple this is revenge for the Anthropic super bowl ads, which were epic burns against openAI's primary future revenue stream.
madeofpalk 11 hours ago
This seems like an exceptionally shallow reading of everything and everyone involved.
You think OpenAI decided to build MurderBot because someone made fun on them selling ads?
nateburke 11 hours ago
I think it's plausible, given the effort he seemed to put into his initial response to the ads: https://x.com/sama/status/2019139174339928189