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Anthropic, which owns the AI assistant Claude, is suing the Trump administration after what it called an “unprecedented and unlawful” decision to blacklist the firm on national security grounds.
The Pentagon designated the artificial intelligence company a “supply chain risk” on Thursday over its refusal to allow unrestricted military use of its technology.
It has been involved in an unusually public dispute over how Anthropic’s AI chatbot Claude could be used in warfare.
Anthropic responded on Monday by filing two separate lawsuits, one in California federal court and another in the federal appeals court in Washington DC each challenging different aspects of the Pentagon’s actions against the company.
“These actions are unprecedented and unlawful,” Anthropic’s lawsuit says.
“The Constitution does not allow the government to wield its enormous power to punish a company for its protected speech. No federal statute authorises the actions taken here. Anthropic turns to the judiciary as a last resort to vindicate its rights and halt the Executive’s unlawful campaign of retaliation.”
The defence department declined to respond, saying its policy is not to comment on ongoing litigation.
Anthropic, whose financial backers include Alphabet’s Google and Amazon, has insisted on restricting its technology from being used for mass surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous weapons.
US defence secretary Pete Hegseth had threatened to punish Anthropic if it did not accept “all lawful uses” of Claude.
Donald Trump also said he would order federal agencies to stop using Claude, though he gave the Pentagon six months to stop using the AI assistant, which is…
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