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OpenAI shares its contract language and 'red lines' in agreement with the Department of War

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OpenAI logo
  • OpenAI, in a blog post, shared some contract language from its agreement with the Department of War.
  • Its tech can't be used for mass domestic surveillance or autonomous weapons, OpenAI said.
  • OpenAI also said that the government should not label its rival, Anthropic, a supply chain risk.

OpenAI says its agreement with the Department of War is "better" and has more safety guardrails than the one Anthropic was blacklisted for refusing to comply with.

In a blog post published Saturday, OpenAI shared some contract language from its agreement with the Department of War, including clauses that indicate its tech cannot be used for mass domestic surveillance or to power autonomous weapons or high-stakes decision systems like "social credit" scores.

"We think our agreement has more guardrails than any previous agreement for classified AI deployments, including Anthropic's," OpenAI's post read. "In our agreement, we protect our red lines through a more expansive, multi-layered approach. We retain full discretion over our safety stack, we deploy via cloud, cleared OpenAI personnel are in the loop, and we have strong contractual protections. This is all in addition to the strong existing protections in U.S. law."

OpenAI's agreement with the federal government comes on the heels of its AI rival, Anthropic, being blacklisted and declared a supply chain risk after refusing to comply with the military's terms of use for the company's frontier model, Claude.

Anthropic, in a Friday statement, said that "no amount of intimidation or punishment from the Department of War will change our position on mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons" and vowed to "challenge any supply chain risk designation in court."

OpenAI, in its Saturday post, argued that Anthropic should not be designated as a supply chain risk and said it had made its position "clear to the government." Its agreement with the Department of War stemmed, in part, from a desire to "de-escalate things between DoW and the US AI labs."

"A good future is going to require real and deep collaboration between the government and the AI labs," OpenAI's post reads. "As part of our deal here, we asked that the same terms be made available to all AI labs, and specifically that the government would try to resolve things with Anthropic; the current state is a very bad way to kick off this next phase of collaboration between the government and AI labs."

Representatives for OpenAI and Anthropic did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. It was not immediately clear whether Anthropic, or any other leading AI company, had been offered similar contractual terms to those that OpenAI said it had agreed to.

OpenAI said that, as part of its deal with the Department of War, it will maintain "full control" over the safety stack it deploys, and robust "safety guardrails" to prevent misuse. Should the government violate the terms of the agreement, OpenAI said it "could" terminate the contract.

"We don't expect that to happen," OpenAI said in its post.

The dispute between the government and the AI giants has sparked widespread criticism, with critics concerned about the ethical implications of the Department of War's use of AI and OpenAI's agreement to provide the government access to its technology.

OpenAI on Saturday said it believes AI will "introduce new risks in the world" and, by allowing the government use of its models, will give people defending national security "the best tools" to do so.

Business Insider previously reported that Anthropic's model, Claude, shot to the top of the app store on Saturday, and many people on social media, including celebrities like Katy Perry, have publicly posted about canceling their ChatGPT subscriptions in the wake of OpenAI's agreement with the government.

Read the original article on Business Insider



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