2/25/2026 at 6:39:29 PM
So the Pentagon is strongarming a company into cooperation? That reminds of how my alcoholic neighbor used to treat his family. It's almost as if someone let a mean drunk be in charge of the Pentagon.by emsign
2/25/2026 at 7:13:44 PM
Without reading every word of every embedded tweet, a part missing from the conversation is HOW they are strongarming.It isn't in private. It's a public threat in the court of public opinion to apply societal pressure on the company. They are attempting to reshape Anthropic's decision into a tribal one, and hurt the brand's reputation within the tribe unless it capitulates.
by basch
2/25/2026 at 7:43:37 PM
> Without reading every word of every embedded tweet, a part missing from the conversation is HOW they are strongarming.There are two possibilities:
> The government would likely argue that dropping the contractual restrictions doesn't change the product. Claude is the same model with the same weights and the same capabilities—the government just wants different contractual terms. […] Anthropic would likely argue the opposite: that its usage restrictions are part of what Claude is as a commercial service, and that Claude-without-guardrails is a product it doesn't offer to anyone. On this view, the government is asking for a new product, and the statute doesn't clearly authorize that.
and
> The more extreme possibility would be the government compelling Anthropic to retrain Claude—to strip the safety guardrails baked into the model's training, not merely modify the access terms. Here the characterization question seems easier: a retrained model looks much more like a new product than dropping contractual restrictions does. Admittedly, the government has a textual argument in its favor: the DPA's definitions of "services" include “development … of a critical critical technology item,” and the government could frame retraining Claude as exactly that. Whether courts would accept that framing, especially in light of the major questions doctrine, is another matter.
* https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/what-the-defense-produc...
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Production_Act_of_1950
A more extreme situation: could the DPA be used to nationalize the model so the government has ownership, and then allow access to more amenable AI players?
by throw0101a
2/25/2026 at 8:03:09 PM
There's a third possibility. Anthropic's management desires cover to remove limiters on some of its products for some of its customers. The Pentagon is more than happy to play the bad guy if it means that they get something that's even more useful to them than what they would have gotten otherwise."We made these compromises because national defense is really super important." has historically proven to be a really effective explanation for tech companies that want to abandon some of their previously-stated "nice and friendly" values in exchange for money.
by simoncion
2/25/2026 at 9:17:35 PM
When I imagine a world with this scenario being the truth, I am less confused than when I imagine a world with the alternatives. I find this to be a fantastic and historically reliable (for me) heuristic.That being said, I imagine it also factors into internal dialogue that allows those higher up to explain to the boots-on-the-ground researchers that "no you're not working for the military industrial complex, they're just stealing your work that was intended to feed the orphans!"
by natpalmer1776
2/25/2026 at 8:46:27 PM
> It isn't in private.We don’t know this
by foogazi
2/25/2026 at 7:53:43 PM
The top line of the article gives a big old hint: Anthropic signed a contract with the “Killing people” part of the government and now they’re putting on a show. No contract, no leverage.The only threat the Pentagon has is to terminate the contract.
by EA-3167
2/25/2026 at 8:01:27 PM
Can they not invoke the defense act without the public spat? Gag order?by basch
2/25/2026 at 9:01:51 PM
Realistically that's an empty threat, especially with the mid-terms coming up and Trump's attention span. The real threat, the actionable one, is the loss of a $200 mil contract. I suspect that the result here will be some highly visible face-saving compromise for Anthropic that means very little.by EA-3167
2/25/2026 at 7:38:28 PM
I wouldn't start up a new company in the US knowing that they are going full tyrant like this.by ljm
2/25/2026 at 8:49:08 PM
It seems like an unfortunate reality that being a government contractor puts any company in any country at the whim of their government. AFAIK every government has 'pulled the rug out' from at least some contractors at some point.by nickff
2/25/2026 at 7:14:12 PM
The whole government 'strong-arms' many of its counter-parties in a variety of situations; this is unfortunately nothing new, and far from an innovation by Hegseth. A more clearly illegal example (because the government was acting as a regulator, not a purchaser) is Operation Choke Point, though there are many others: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Choke_Pointby nickff
2/25/2026 at 7:16:58 PM
Like...governments pressuring social media companies to censor/ban/deamplify unapproved views and making up an Orwellian term like "misinformation" to justify it?by brightball
2/25/2026 at 7:28:45 PM
COVID and election discourse was (and is) massively influenced by foreign actors, and social media companies were disinclined to take action on that front, as it was good engagement. Thus the government was motivated to do something about it. This leads us to now, where we're looking at ID/citizenship requirements for much of what people consider "the internet".by tencentshill
2/25/2026 at 7:19:56 PM
Isn't this just whataboutism? I can't tell if you're defending the practice described in the post, trying to distract from it, or just going off on a tangent for no reason.by NewJazz
2/25/2026 at 7:25:32 PM
[dead]by smohare
2/25/2026 at 7:13:41 PM
As if governments throughout history haven't constantly used threats to gain leverage? No need to take a personal shot at the guy in charge when this is SOP throughout the administration.by CodingJeebus
2/25/2026 at 8:24:19 PM
I don't like the "guy in charge" anyway but it's not clear the other major party would stand united against this if they were in power. While I believe they'd probably have hearings and debate it more, this may be one of those issues where the defense establishment usually gets what it wants no matter which party is in control. One party protesting an issue when they're in the minority can just be performative "point scoring" against their opposition - not a guarantee of what result they'd participate in engineering if they were in power.Much like FISA court-enabled unaccountable surveillance, this may be another of the increasing number of things where neither major party is will actually stop it. In terms of real-world outcomes, it doesn't much matter whether the party in control has just enough of their members (in the safest seats) vote with the minority to pass an unpopular measure or if they all vote for it. When the votes are stage managed in advance, the count being close is merely optics to further the narrative that the two major parties represent meaningfully different outcomes on every major issue.
by mrandish
2/25/2026 at 7:42:01 PM
Why do you personally feel the need to defend this person given his involvement in what the administration is doing?by ljm
2/25/2026 at 11:34:48 PM
Besides he takes enough shots as it is. Ahoyooo! Thank you, I'll be here all week.by EdwardDiego
2/25/2026 at 7:41:57 PM
Guy is an unqualified alcoholic in charge of our safety. All shots are warranted.by buellerbueller
2/25/2026 at 7:20:37 PM
Personal shots at the guy in charge have happened many times in history. Aren't you violating the principle defined in your first sentence?by linkregister