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zephen | 2 days ago
You're ignoring the sequence of events on the ground.
If there hadn't been any been any internal pushback from Anthropic, would the directive have ever been made public?
zephen | 2 days ago
You're ignoring the sequence of events on the ground.
If there hadn't been any been any internal pushback from Anthropic, would the directive have ever been made public?
nelox|2 days ago
Internal pushback and public damage control aren't mutually exclusive. A company can genuinely disagree with a client's demands behind closed doors and simultaneously craft a public narrative designed to make itself look as good as possible once those disagreements surface. In fact, that's exactly what competent communications teams do, they plan for the scenario where private disputes become public, and they have messaging ready.
The real question isn't who went public first or why. It's whether Anthropic's stated position, "we support these military use cases but not those ones", reflects a durable ethical framework or a line drawn precisely where it needed to be to keep both the contracts and the brand intact. Nothing in the sequencing you've described answers that question. It just tells us Anthropic saw this coming, which, if anything, means the messaging was more carefully engineered, not less.
kalkin|2 days ago