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Tag: Pete Hegseth

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Mar 01, 2026
acx
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27 min 4,148 words 435 comments 427 likes podcast (20 min)
Scott analyzes the legal controversy around AI companies contracting with the Department of War, showing that 'all lawful use' permits mass surveillance and autonomous weapons through existing legal loopholes, despite OpenAI's claims of safeguards. Longer summary
Scott Alexander analyzes the controversy around AI companies' contracts with the Department of War, focusing on Secretary of War Pete Hegseth's designation of Anthropic as a 'supply chain risk' after they refused to allow their AI to be used for mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. The post examines OpenAI's subsequent agreement with the DoW, which permits 'all lawful use' of their models. Through detailed legal analysis provided by anonymous readers, Scott shows that current laws have significant loopholes: mass domestic surveillance is technically legal when data is 'incidentally obtained' or purchased from third parties, and autonomous weapons are only regulated by vague DoW policies that can be changed at will. The post critiques OpenAI's FAQ as misleading, arguing their safeguards are inadequate, and concludes with questions that employees, journalists, and lawmakers should be asking about the contract. Shorter summary
Feb 25, 2026
acx
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19 min 2,929 words 720 comments 567 likes podcast (24 min)
Scott analyzes the Pentagon's threatening tactics against Anthropic for refusing to remove Usage Policy restrictions from their contract, arguing this represents unprecedented authoritarian overreach and supporting Anthropic's stance against mass surveillance. Longer summary
Scott discusses a contract dispute between Anthropic and the Pentagon, where the Pentagon is attempting to renegotiate their original agreement to remove Anthropic's Usage Policy restrictions and gain access to AI for 'all lawful purposes.' Anthropic has resisted, requesting guarantees against mass surveillance of American citizens and autonomous killbots, which the Pentagon refused. The Pentagon has threatened various consequences including designating Anthropic a 'supply chain risk'—an unprecedented use of a designation previously only applied to foreign adversaries. Scott argues strongly in support of Anthropic's position, viewing the Pentagon's tactics as authoritarian overreach. He addresses numerous counterarguments in detail, explains why the Pentagon should simply switch to another AI vendor, and praises the widespread support Anthropic has received from across the political spectrum and the tech industry. Shorter summary
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