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Anthropic
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As I see it
Alex Lo

US Anthropic ban is best advert for Chinese AI

Cutting off the company’s latest models for non-Americans only serves to highlight China’s open-source alternatives to the rest of the world

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A person holds a phone with the logo of the AI assistant “Claude Mythos” built by Anthropic, on June 10. Photo: AFP
Alex Lo has been an SCMP columnist since 2012, covering major issues affecting Hong Kong and the rest of China.

Bankers working for JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong must have been miffed when they were shut off from using artificial intelligence (AI) models from Anthropic, a pioneering American firm in the field.

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase pulled the plug in April and last week respectively, based on a strict interpretation of Anthropic’s terms of use, which reflect Washington’s stringent restrictions on China’s access to frontier American AI models.

The banks’ decisions are seen as a potential blow to the competitiveness of the city’s financial sector. In a report, the Financial Times warned that, “Preventing access to the world’s most advanced AI models represents a threat to Hong Kong’s revival as an international financial centre, given their rapid adoption in other parts of the world, particularly for coding.”

A US Commerce Department directive this month means all foreigners are to be denied access to Anthropic’s most advanced Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models, including Anthropic’s own foreign employees.

The export control directive gave Anthropic just 90 minutes to shut off access, citing national security concerns.

As events unfold, China’s AI industry may emerge as the real winner. If foreigners can’t use America’s most advanced AI models, most will just switch to the “good enough” ones developed by Chinese firms, which charge a fraction of the cost.

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