Anthropic launches research institute and DC policy office amid government lawsuit

Anthropic has launched the Anthropic Institute, a new research initiative, and opened its first Public Policy office in Washington, DC, this spring. These steps follow the AI company's recent federal lawsuit against the US government over a Defense Department supply chain risk designation tied to a contract dispute.

Building on its March 9 lawsuit challenging the US Defense Department's supply chain risk label—stemming from Anthropic's refusal to lift safeguards on its Claude AI for military use—the company announced expansions in policy and research.

Anthropic is tripling its Public Policy team size and establishing its first DC office this spring, as reported by Axios. Sarah Heck, new Head of External Affairs, will lead policy efforts, succeeding co-founder Jack Clark, who shifts to Head of Public Benefit overseeing the Anthropic Institute.

The institute will consolidate and expand existing groups: the Frontier Red Team (AI stress-testing), Societal Impacts team (real-world applications), and Economic Research team (job/economy effects). It aims to share insights on AI's challenges, including economic reshaping and new risks. Founding members include Matt Botvinick (ex-Google DeepMind) and Zoë Hitzig (ex-OpenAI).

In a related court hearing, Anthropic sought assurances against further penalties from the Trump administration, which declined. Sources indicate a potential new White House executive order targeting the company.

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Courtroom illustration of Anthropic suing the US DoD over AI supply-chain risk label, featuring executives, documents, and Claude AI elements.
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Anthropic sues US defense department over supply chain risk designation

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Anthropic has filed a federal lawsuit against the US Department of Defense, challenging its recent label of the AI company as a supply-chain risk. The dispute stems from a contract disagreement over the use of Anthropic's Claude AI for military purposes, including restrictions on mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. The company argues the designation violates free speech and due process rights.

The UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology has proposed that Anthropic expand its London office and pursue a potential dual stock listing, according to a Financial Times report. This effort follows a dispute between the San Francisco-based AI company and the US Department of Defense. Officials aim to attract Anthropic amid ongoing tensions.

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Following last week's federal ban on its AI tools, Anthropic has resumed negotiations with the US Defense Department to avert a supply chain risk designation. Meanwhile, OpenAI's parallel military agreement is under fire from employees, rivals, and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, who accused it of misleading claims in a leaked memo.

The Pentagon is considering ending its relationship with AI firm Anthropic due to disagreements over safeguards. Anthropic, the maker of the Claude AI model, has raised concerns about hard limits on fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. This stems from the Pentagon's desire to apply AI models in warfighting scenarios, which Anthropic has declined.

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Anthropic's CEO Dario Amodei stated that the company will not comply with the Pentagon's request to remove safeguards from its AI models, despite threats of exclusion from defense systems. The dispute centers on preventing the AI's use in autonomous weapons and domestic surveillance. The firm, which has a $200 million contract with the Department of Defense, emphasizes its commitment to ethical AI use.

Following last week's unveiling that sparked global alarms, Anthropic has restricted its powerful Mythos AI—adept at finding cybersecurity vulnerabilities—to select firms under Project Glasswing, including Amazon Web Services, Apple, and Google, after an accidental leak raised national security concerns.

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Anthropic announced on Wednesday the launch of Claude Managed Agents, a new product aimed at simplifying the creation and deployment of AI agents for businesses. The tool provides developers with ready-made infrastructure to build autonomous AI systems. It addresses a key barrier in automating work tasks amid the company's rapid enterprise growth.

 

 

 

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