News

There are three trends emerging in AI enterprise software adoption, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said during an appearance at ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang disagrees with Anthropic's Dario Amodei, saying AI will reshape jobs, not erase them, as he claimed ...
An AI researcher put leading AI models to the test in a game of Diplomacy. Here's how the models fared.
Anthropic Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan joined TechCrunch Senior Reporter Maxwell Zeff at our TechCrunch ...
Anthropic says the new models underwent the same "safety testing" as all Claude models. The company has been pursuing ...
In a new lawsuit, Reddit accuses AI company Anthropic of illegally scraping its users’ data—including posts authored by ...
Anthropic wanted to show off its Claude chatbot's writing skills by having it pen a blog — but just after announcing the ...
Anthropic says it has released a new set of AI models tailored for U.S. national security customers.
A proposed 10-year ban on states regulating AI "is far too blunt an instrument," Amodei wrote in an op-ed. Here's why.
The release follows a broader trend of increased ties between AI companies and the US government amidst uncertain AI policy.
The social platform alleges that Anthropic used data from Reddit to train its AI. Anthropic denies the claims.
Reddit's content is a gold mine for teaching AI to sound human — and Reddit isn’t about to let it go for free.