| ▲ | drawnwren 2 hours ago | |
One positive thing I will say about this administration is that they have really drawn into focus the difference between de jure and de facto law. My hope is that this gets us some real concern for things that have been defended with de facto arguments (i.e. privacy) going forward. edit: Anthropic argues that your Crayola analogy is fundamentally incorrect. > Legally, a supply chain risk designation under 10 USC 3252 can only extend to the use of Claude as part of Department of War contracts—it cannot affect how contractors use Claude to serve other customers. https://www.anthropic.com/news/statement-comments-secretary-... | ||
| ▲ | mrandish 10 minutes ago | parent [-] | |
> Anthropic argues that your Crayola analogy is fundamentally incorrect. Yes, I just saw Dario's latest post with that more detailed info. My understanding was informed by news reporting in a couple different outlets but those reports may have been conflating the "supply chain risk" designation (under 10 USC 3252) with the net effect of statements from the pentagon and white house which go substantially further. Even if it's not in the legal scope of 10 USC 3252, the administration has made clear they intend to ban Anthropic from use across the federal government. AFAICT doing that is probably within the discretionary remit of the executive branch, even though I believe it's unprecedented - to your point about de jure and de facto law. To me, if there's a silver lining to all this, it's making a strong case for restricting executive branch power. Edit to add: Per the Wall Street Journal's lead story (updated in the last hour): "The General Services Administration, which oversees federal procurement, said it is removing Anthropic from its product offerings to government agencies... Even absent the supply-chain risk designation, broadening the clash to include all federal agencies takes the Anthropic fight to a much larger scale than its spat with the Pentagon." | ||