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The Trump administration has eased restrictions on Anthropic's advanced AI model Mythos, allowing access to over 100 US organizations, while continuing to limit broader release.
The US government issues an export control directive restricting foreign national access to Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models, while OpenAI previews GPT-5.6. Concurrent hardware price hikes from Apple and Nvidia are noted, with commentary urging self-sufficiency in AI.
The AI industry is fragmenting into three geopolitical stacks (US, China, EU) as OpenAI develops custom chips, Anthropic faces export controls, and Chinese models like DeepSeek dominate Hugging Face, ending the myth of a global AI commons.
Anthropic's Mythos-class AI models remain offline after two weeks of unresolved negotiations with the Trump administration over export controls, raising concerns about the future of the US AI industry and the lack of clear frameworks for AI regulation.
Anthropic's Fable 5 model disappeared after 96 hours due to export controls, and days later, Z.ai open-sourced GLM-5.2 under MIT license, surpassing Fable 5 on the Design Arena. This highlights that the best model is not always the most accessible, shifting focus from benchmarks to availability and licensing.
A federal lawsuit in DC challenges the US government's authority to regulate hosted AI model access as an export control, arguing that providing outputs without transferring weights does not constitute export. The case tests the legal basis for such controls.
The Trump administration has grown frustrated with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, preferring to deal with cofounder Tom Brown regarding the re-release of the Claude Fable 5 AI model, as export controls remain in place due to jailbreak concerns.
The Chip Security Act, which would mandate location-tracking mechanisms for advanced AI chips to prevent diversion to China, has gained support from six companies specializing in tracking sensitive shipments, while opponents argue it could hamper U.S. chip sales.
This newsletter highlights ASML's $400 million chipmaking machine critical for AI-era chips and Anthropic's feud with the US government over export controls on its Mythos AI model.
Anthropic's release of a powerful coding AI model led to US export controls, sparking debate about AI regulation, national security, and global competition with Chinese open-source models.
Anthropic's Mythos AI model allegedly breached nearly all NSA classified systems within hours during a red-team evaluation, leading to unprecedented US export controls directly targeting AI models.
The U.S. government shut down Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models via export controls over a perceived jailbreak, sparking controversy about the feasibility of blocking offensive use without sacrificing defensive capabilities. The article also covers other AI developments including MidJourney Medical's full-body scanning and Anthropic's policy proposals.
The US government ordered Anthropic to restrict export of its powerful AI models Fable and Mythos, citing national security concerns. The article compares this to historical encryption export controls like PGP, arguing such controls have been largely ineffective.
This article covers several major AI developments: Meta reportedly moving away from open-source Llama, Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 being pulled by US export controls, Apple partnering with Google for Siri, and trends in model cost reduction and platform agents. The author highlights the implications for developers relying on these models.
Anthropic's release of Claude Fable 5 with restrictive guardrails and the U.S. government's subsequent export controls on the model have sparked concerns about AI sovereignty and the stability of proprietary AI platforms.
US officials claim ASML's EUV lithography machine may have ended up in China, which would breach export controls; ASML denies this, stating no such machine is in China and that all units are tracked.
The article details the ongoing dispute between Anthropic and the Trump administration over export controls on advanced AI models, highlighting the lack of clear regulations and the ad-hoc nature of White House decisions.
The Verge's Decoder podcast discusses the US government's export controls on Anthropic's Fable 5 model, leading to its takedown. The episode explores the implications for AI regulation and the irony of Anthropic's long-standing calls for government oversight now backfiring.
The Trump administration ordered Anthropic to revoke access to its powerful Claude Mythos and Fable 5 AI models for foreign nationals after concerns over SK Telecom's alleged ties to China and security vulnerabilities flagged by Amazon. Anthropic disabled the models entirely rather than implement nationality-based restrictions.
The Trump administration ordered Anthropic to block access to its AI models Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for foreign nationals, citing national security export controls. Experts say this unprecedented action exposes uncertainty in AI governance, as traditional export rules don't clearly apply to remote AI services.