OpenAI amending deal with Pentagon to ensure surveillance safeguards: CEO Sam Altman
Sam Altman said OpenAI is working with the United States Department of Defense to clarify their agreement. The deal states that services will not be used by intelligence agencies such as the National Security Agency without a contract change. Open...

"Consistent with applicable laws, including the Fourth Amendment...the AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of US persons and nationals," CEO Sam Altman posted on X on Tuesday.
OpenAI secured the defence contract on Friday hours after its rival Anthropic refused to agree to unconditional military use of its Claude AI models, prompting backlash from US officials.
Anthropic insisted it needed guarantees against AI use for surveillance as well as autonomous weapons, and Altman said the Defense Department had agreed to "technical safeguards" for those areas.
But in response to growing scepticism about the value of such safeguards, Altman posted Monday that "to make our principles very clear...we are going to amend our deal."
In addition to surveillance, he said the Pentagon agreed that OpenAI models would not be used by its intelligence agencies, including the National Security Agency.
"There are many things the technology just isn't ready for, and many areas we don't yet understand the tradeoffs required for safety."
He also criticized the Pentagon's punishment of Anthropic by declaring it a supply chain risk -- meaning any company that works with the US military can have no dealings with Anthropic.
Anthropic has vowed to fight the order in court, calling it a "dangerous precedent for any American company that negotiates with the government."
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