Claude Code's product lead talks usage limits, transparency, and the "lean harness"
"We have no grand plan," says Anthropic's Cat Wu—but that's by design.
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Anthropic's stance highlights the risks of unauthorized share transactions, emphasizing the need for investor diligence and regulatory oversight. The post Anthropic warns investors to avoid unauthorized secondary market sellers appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Read full article"We have no grand plan," says Anthropic's Cat Wu—but that's by design.
An article from AI CERTs reporting on the Anthropic-SpaceX capacity arrangement caught my attention because it highlights a possibility the cloud market has been moving toward for years but has never fully embraced. The traditional assumption has always been simple: If you need elastic infrastructure at scale, you go to a hyperscaler such as AWS, Microsoft, or Google. They own the data centers, they understand multitenancy, and they know how to deliver computing as a repeatable service. The article suggests something different may now be emerging. Organizations with excess capacity may be able to act, at least temporarily, like cloud providers. This is a meaningful shift. If access to compute, power, and networking can be packaged and sold by enterprises, AI infrastructure operators, telecoms, colocation players, and perhaps even large private data center owners, then cloud computing becomes less about who invented the model and more about who has available capacity right now. In other
OpenAI has integrated its Codex AI coding agent into the ChatGPT mobile app for iOS and Android, allowing developers to monitor live environments, review outputs, approve commands, and manage workflows remotely. The update, currently in preview, follows Codex gaining background desktop capabilities last month and a Chrome extension earlier this month — part of a rapid expansion […]
The post Anthropic and Gates Foundation commit $200 million to AI tools for health, education, and agriculture appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. According to Anthropic’s blog, the company and the Gates Foundation have announced a partnership worth $200 million to develop AI technologies for health care, education, and farming in countries that rarely see investments in commercial AI technologies. The funding will include grant money, Claude API credits, and technical assistance for four years. Elizabeth Kelly, who heads the Beneficial Deployments team at Anthropic, described it as “really core to who we are as a company.” The deal is four times larger than the $50 million partnership the Gates Foundation struck with OpenAI in January. That one targets 1,000 African clinics by 2028. Claude to support vaccine screening and disease forecasting Around 4.6 billion people worldwide lack access to essential health services, per the WHO. Anthropic and the Gates Foundation will equip researc
The exposure of security flaws in AI systems like Claude highlights the urgent need for robust safeguards, especially in sensitive sectors. The post Anthropic’s Claude faces security flaws as researchers expose deep trust issues in AI architecture appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Anthropic's security lapses in Claude's architecture highlight critical risks for tech sectors, urging a reevaluation of trust and governance protocols. The post Anthropic faces scrutiny over Claude’s architectural flaws after multiple security disclosures in May 2026 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
AI lab has tapped Dragoneer, Greenoaks, Sequoia Capital and Altimeter Capital to lead new round
The post Apple Mac M5 System Exploited With Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI, Researchers Claim appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief A security firm claims it built a working macOS kernel exploit targeting Apple’s M5 chip and Memory Integrity Enforcement system. The company says a preview version of Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI helped identify bugs and assist with exploit development. Apple has not yet publicly commented on the claims. Apple devices have long been considered among the hardest consumer systems to hack because of the company’s tightly integrated hardware and software security. Now, a security startup claims a small team of researchers used a preview version of Anthropic’s Claude Mythos to build a working exploit against Apple’s new M5 chip protections in less than a week. In a Substack post published Thursday, the Vietnam-based Calif said it developed what it describes as the first public macOS kernel memory corruption exploit capable of surviving Apple’s new Memory