Claude AI app tops App Store amid backlash to US government ban

Anthropic's Claude AI app has hit the top spot on Apple's App Store free apps chart, overtaking ChatGPT and Gemini, fueled by public support following President Trump's federal ban on the tool over Anthropic's AI safety refusals.

In a striking consumer market response to escalating tensions with the US government, Anthropic's Claude AI app climbed to the number one position on the App Store's Top Free Apps leaderboard as of March 1, 2026, pushing OpenAI's ChatGPT to second and Google Gemini to third.

This surge follows President Trump's February 27 order barring federal agencies from using Claude, prompted by Anthropic's refusal to lift guardrails against mass surveillance or autonomous weapons—details covered in prior reporting. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had threatened to designate Anthropic a 'supply-chain risk' after the company stood firm on safety priorities.

Public backlash appears to have driven downloads, boosting Claude's visibility despite federal restrictions. OpenAI has stepped in with a Defense Department deal to fill the gap.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman weighed in during an X AMA, calling the risk designation for Anthropic 'a very bad decision' and a 'scary precedent,' while hoping for reversal and a better outcome.

The episode underscores divides between AI firms' safety stances and government demands, with Claude thriving commercially even as federal access ends.

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President Trump signs executive order banning Anthropic AI in federal government amid military dispute, with symbolic AI restriction visuals.
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Trump orders federal ban on Anthropic AI for government use

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US President Donald Trump has directed all federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's AI tools amid a dispute over military applications. The move follows weeks of clashes between Anthropic and Pentagon officials regarding restrictions on AI for mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. A six-month phase-out period has been announced.

US President Donald Trump has directed federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's Claude AI, following the company's refusal to allow its use for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. The order includes a six-month phaseout period. This decision stems from ongoing clashes between Anthropic and the Department of Defense over AI restrictions.

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US President Donald Trump has directed federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's AI technology. The order follows a dispute with the Pentagon, where the company refused unconditional military use of its Claude models. Anthropic has vowed to challenge the Pentagon's ban in court.

After Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said in late February that the company would not allow its Claude model to be used for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons, senior Pentagon officials said they have no intention of using AI for domestic surveillance and insist that private firms cannot set binding limits on how the U.S. military employs AI tools.

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The Pentagon has formally notified AI company Anthropic that it is deemed a “supply chain risk,” a rare designation that critics say is typically aimed at adversary-linked technology. The move follows a breakdown in negotiations over whether the U.S. military can use Anthropic’s Claude models for all lawful purposes, versus contractual limits the company says are needed to prevent fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance.

In the wake of Anthropic's unveiling of its powerful Claude Mythos AI—capable of detecting and exploiting software vulnerabilities—the US Treasury Secretary has convened top bank executives to highlight escalating AI-driven cyber threats. The move underscores growing concerns as the AI is restricted to a tech coalition via Project Glasswing.

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Anthropic has released a beta add-on bringing its Claude AI assistant to Microsoft Word, available now to customers on Team and Enterprise plans. The integration allows users to generate new content, edit documents, and handle comments within the app. It offers an alternative to Microsoft's Copilot.

 

 

 

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