Dario Amodei · Anthropic · Claude · Mythos · U.S. · Federal Reserve (FED) · Decrypt
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said Wednesday that governments can no longer treat AI regulation as a problem to study
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In the essay, titled "Policy on the AI Exponential," Amodei argues that transparency requirements are no longer sufficient and calls for binding regulation of frontier AI systems.
Key facts
- The essay also comes the same week that Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5, a public-facing version of Claude Mythos 5, which routes certain requests involving cybersecurity, biology, chemistry
- Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said Wednesday that governments can no longer treat AI regulation as a problem to study and that the United States needs binding safety requirements for the most powerful
- Amodei's essay comes as Anthropic expands access to Claude Mythos with the launch of Mythos 5 on Tuesday, its restricted frontier AI model for cybersecurity organizations and government partners
- AI is advancing at a lightning pace—in only four years, AI models have gone from barely being able to write a coherent line of code to writing most of the code at major AI companies,” Amodei wrote
Summary
Amodei says the era of transparency-first AI regulation is over, and the US needs FAA-style testing requirements for frontier models now. The essay calls for mandatory third-party testing across four risk categories: cybersecurity, bioweapons, loss of AI control, and automated R&D. Anthropic is releasing a legislative proposal on frontier model testing and a policy framework for job displacement alongside the essay. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said Wednesday that governments can no longer treat AI regulation as a problem to study and that the United States needs binding safety requirements for the most powerful AI models.