𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗧𝗵𝗿𝗲𝗲 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗱𝘀
A researcher typed three words into Anthropic's most powerful AI model: fix this code.
Within ninety minutes, the United States government shut the model down.
The vulnerability was a simple prompt. It was not a complex attack. The model provided cybersecurity data that its safety systems should have blocked.
The Commerce Department used export control authority to stop the model. They ordered Anthropic to bar all foreign nationals from accessing it. This included some of Anthropic's own engineers. Anthropic took the models offline to avoid excluding its own staff.
The official reason was national security. But the story has a deeper layer.
Amazon discovered the bypass. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told government officials about it.
Amazon is a massive investor in Anthropic. Amazon also provides the cloud infrastructure Anthropic uses. Most importantly, Amazon's own AI products compete with Anthropic.
The finding went from a competitor to the government. It bypassed the company that built the model.
This event shows three critical things:
Brand risk: Anthropic built its reputation on safety. When a "safe" model fails, the political cost is higher. The brand becomes a liability.
New power structures: Amazon acts as an investor, a provider, and a competitor. No other industry has this setup. A single phone call from a competitor can trigger legal machinery to shut a company down.
Rapid intervention: The government proved it can force an AI company to kill its main product in under two hours. There was no notice and no appeals process.
AI companies thought they would either regulate themselves or face government policy. They did not plan for a third option.
They did not plan for regulation through sudden intervention triggered by corporate intelligence.
Safety researchers wanted guardrails for AI. They failed to realize who would actually build them.
Source: https://dev.to/thesythesis/the-three-words-3ijl
Optional learning community: https://t.me/GyaanSetuAi