OpenAI is amending its Pentagon deal after critics said the original contract didn’t actually ban AI-powered mass surveillance of Americans. CEO Sam Altman added explicit language prohibiting domestic surveillance—including through commercially purchased data—and confirmed NSA use is off the table for now. He also said he’d “rather go to jail” than follow an unconstitutional order, and urged the DoD to offer Anthropic the same revised terms. OpenAI is amending its Pentagon deal after critics said the original contract didn’t actually ban AI-powered mass surveillance of Americans. CEO Sam Altman added explicit language prohibiting domestic surveillance—including through commercially purchased data—and confirmed NSA use is off the table for now. He also said he’d “rather go to jail” than follow an unconstitutional order, and urged the DoD to offer Anthropic the same revised terms.
Trending
- Nepal votes today: Pitted against Balen, Oli faces litmus test of 50-year-old career
- Oxford museum set to return 500-year-old bronze statue taken from Tamil Nadu temple
- Oxford museum set to return 500-year-old bronze statue taken from Tamil Nadu temple
- Middle East crisis: Trump rates US war effort ‘15 out of 10’; vows to push on against Iran
- Indian-origin elderly couple loses £2,500 in fake flight ticket fraud at Heathrow: ‘Don’t know how scammers got our number’
- Arkansas father accused of killing daughter’s alleged rapist wins GOP nomination for sheriff
- US orders non-emergency consular staff to leave Pakistan amid Middle East tensions
- What is Indian-American Voter Atlas? Political strategist launches tool to track diaspora