Trump administration lifts restrictions on
Anthropic’s
Claude models after cybersecurity alarm 1 of 2 | Pages from the
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Anthropic website and the company’s logo are displayed on a computer screen in New York, Feb. 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File) 1 of 2 Pages from the
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San Francisco (AP) — The Trump administration has lifted restrictions on
Artificial Intelligence company
Anthropic’s latest versions of its
Claude chatbot, ending a weekslong ban tied to cybersecurity concerns.
Anthropic said Tuesday night that its AI model called
Claude-fable-5" class="entity-link entity-topic" data-entity-id="143314" data-entity-type="topic">
Claude Fable 5 is now widely available. It’s also restoring access to its most powerful model,
Mythos 5, but only to a select group of U.S.-based organizations approved by the federal government.The
Commerce Department blocked foreign nationals from using both AI models on June 12, a move that
San Francisco-based
Anthropic said forced the company to immediately take the products down for all users just days after it unveiled them.
Anthropic said in a blog post this week that the government’s concerns were sparked by a report from cybersecurity researchers at
Amazon,
Anthropic’s primary cloud computing provider. The company “had found a method of bypassing Fable 5’s safeguards” that enabled it to discover and potentially exploit software vulnerabilities,
Anthropic said. Officials have grown increasingly concerned since
Anthropic warned earlier this year that its Mythos model was adept at finding software flaws in a way that could be weaponized by malicious hackers and threaten critical computer networks around the world. 3 MIN READ 23 MIN READ
Anthropic’s chief rival, ChatGPT maker OpenAI, also said Friday it is restricting the release of its new
Artificial Intelligence model at the request of President
Donald Trump’s administration. OpenAI said its new AI product, called GPT-5.6 Sol, would be accessible only to a select group of government-approved customers for a temporary period.Trump last month signed an executive order on AI oversight that established a framework for the federal government to vet the national security risks of the most advanced AI systems for up to 30 days before their public release. The order described participation by AI developers as voluntary, but the framework has not yet been fully developed.