# AI policy
Latest news and articles about AI policy
Total: 5 articles found

Anthropic Sues Trump Administration After Pentagon Brands AI Firm a ‘Supply-Chain Risk’
Anthropic has sued the U.S. government after the Pentagon declared it a supply‑chain risk, cancelling contracts and blocking use of its Claude AI model in defence systems. The dispute centers on whether vendors can impose ethical limits on military uses of AI, and the case could set a precedent for how the U.S. treats commercial AI suppliers tied to national-security infrastructure.

Shenzhen’s Longgang Offers Up to RMB 10m to Back ‘OpenClaw’ AI Agents and Solo AI Start‑Ups
Shenzhen’s Longgang district has proposed a comprehensive support package to build an ecosystem around the open‑source AI agent OpenClaw and the ‘One Person Company’ (OPC) solo entrepreneurship model. The draft offers subsidies, data access, compute credits and talent incentives — including grants and equity channels of up to RMB 10 million — to accelerate agent‑driven startups and domestic AIGC production.

When AI Becomes a Bayonet: Trump’s Crackdown, Anthropic’s Stand and OpenAI’s Quick Capitulation
A NetEase commentary argues that recent U.S. actions against AI firms have transformed generative models into instruments of state power. The piece links a U.S. move to restrict Anthropic, Anthropic’s resistance, and OpenAI’s swift compliance, using the episode to warn of a fragmented, securitized global AI landscape.

Seedance 2.0: China’s Groundbreaking AI Video Engine That Both Liberates and Alarm
Seedance 2.0, a Chinese generative video model, can produce hyper-realistic footage by integrating image, motion, audio and text, lowering the barriers to making sophisticated video. Its realism has sparked copyright backlash and deepfake concerns even as China’s large user base, open-source releases and supportive AI policy accelerate development and adoption.

Silicon Valley Pours Cash into Pro‑AI Politics — Brockman, a16z Back Super PAC with $125m+
A pro‑AI super PAC, Lead the Future, has raised over $125 million with donations from Greg Brockman, Joe Lonsdale and Andreessen Horowitz. The move signals Silicon Valley’s growing willingness to use large‑scale political spending to influence AI policy and elections at a time when regulators are tightening scrutiny of the technology.