ck2 1 hour ago

they are doing DOGE-cuts to all of intelligence now anyway

dozens upon dozens fired for no reason

so US "intelligence" is going to go even further backwards

* https://www.yahoo.com/news/politics/articles/trump-acting-ch...

November is going to be insanity

  • parineum 1 hour ago

    > dozens upon dozens fired for no reason

    When you say without reason do you mean without cause?

    • islandfox100 50 minutes ago

      Seems to me OP's implication is that they were fired because someone wanted to hit a quota of (employees cut/payroll expenses reduced), or other similarly ''reasonless'' justifications.

  • kansface 1 hour ago

    Here is one sector of the US government I'm happy to see burned down. If the alternative is the status quo, I'm OK with any roll of the dice.

    • tempodox 52 minutes ago

      It can always get worse.

      • eigenspace 15 minutes ago

        Pah! Nonsense. What could possibly be worse than Weimar Germany or Tsarist Russia?

        • baby_souffle 3 minutes ago

          Speed running through that to 1984?

    • shimman 16 minutes ago

      You're assuming that they are "dismantling" it in a sense, what they are actually doing is mostly attacking workers while introducing extremely unsafe software. If you think LLMs are terrible, imagine it being the gatekeeper on whether your personal info is shared to an individual (and they ain't wasting time on the boring info either!).

      When you want to reorient the government, it's much easier doing it with a smaller more loyal force. Now introduce tools that make mass surveillance easier and less accountable.

      Like that's not a bad thing for them, that's what they want to do.

      ---

      Back to the article, I'm not shocked that a massive LLM company speed running into the brick wall that is the US government; just thought it would be OpenAI, but Sam Altman is truly the best bottom feeder the game.

      Also fully believe that Anthropic is hoping that public sentiment is on their side but more Americans hate AI companies than Trump so it's not going to go how they want.

      Give it maybe 3-6 months before the Trump Admin talks about openly nationalizing Anthropic.

  • derektank 1 hour ago

    The NSA is managed by the NSA director, an independently appointed and confirmed office separate from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The DNI does have the authority to restrict funds to the NSA, and sets certain priorities, policy, etc. but the NSA director is not beholden to the DNI and makes their hiring and firing decisions independently. They’re also, currently and historically though not required by statute, a flag officer in the US military and dual-hatted as the commander of CYBERCOM. All this is to say, chaos in the office of the DNI does not necessarily impact the NSA.

  • sailfast 1 hour ago

    Anecdata suggests NSA just got on board and kept going tbh. Not sure they’ve felt the same impacts / churn as other agencies, and not sure they’ve ever really been that beholden to the DNI.

medlazik 1 hour ago

AI marketing bullshit stunts are unlike anything I've seen in 30 years. It started with MS Copilot so called capabilities for work, which were completely made up use cases that didn't work at all (3 years later still). We've had OpenAI "AGI is coming" and "AI will take your job", now we have Mythos being so "dangerous" for cybersecurity, which of course makes the average Joe interpret it as Anthropic being "the better overall company, the NSA uses it!!". I mean gov foes with Anthropic are probably true, but the marketing is to blame not Mythos capabilities. This is all so fucking pathetic

  • ToucanLoucan 1 hour ago

    All for a product that has yet to make a single honest dollar in profit for anyone who isn't nvidia.

    When this goes we might well see a recession. Not that anyone responsible will be worse off, of course.

    • tempodox 48 minutes ago

      The perpetrators all have their golden parachutes. The taxpayers will foot the bill.

    • scottyah 32 minutes ago

      Why on earth would you expect any of them to take profit so early in the game?

  • bflesch 1 hour ago

    We should seriously reframe this whole AI thing to "SI = simulated intelligence".

    It's google in a box. Great achievement, makes knowledge work faster, but please stop bothering everyone else.

    The Uber and Groupon people became billionaires, so the "Simulated Intelligence" folks will also achieve it. No need to worry and drown everyone in these bs stories only non-tech people believe.

  • colechristensen 58 minutes ago

    I was able to identify, diagnose, fix, and upstream a minor bug in and erlang/OTP ssh key implementation with Opus in maybe 20 minutes (+2 weeks or so for upstream). It is not impossible that I could have done this before, but it would have taken days or weeks. The actual fix was about 2 lines of code, hardly AI slop, but getting there would have been quite the slog, and I never would have done it.

    There is a lot of the reason for AI skepticism out there, but people tend to do massive overcorrections and underestimate the force multiplier it can be, particularly for people with some idea of what they're doing and a good grasp of how to take advantage of the tool.

    • medlazik 45 minutes ago

      I said absolutely nothing about LLMs, which is a fantastic tool I'm using every day. I'm talking about marketing.

      • gallerdude 30 minutes ago

        So let’s say you’re in Anthropic’s shoes. You see that LLM’s are getting better and better, and it’s very possible that they will have some impact on jobs in the next few years, and a very meaningful impact on cybersecurity.

        Is it more ethical to stay silent about these concerns, as you might have a bit of self interest? Or even if it looks a bit self interested, is it better to warn people ahead of time? I think the latter is obviously the better position.

        • ifwinterco 4 minutes ago

          The issue is both OpenAI and Anthropic have lied so many times that it’s no longer rational to take anything they say at face value.

          Also: they don’t have to know they’re lying to say things that aren’t true. There is definitely some cult-like behaviour at the moment on the west coast

  • thewebguyd 51 minutes ago

    > and "AI will take your job"

    Don't forget, its no longer cool to say that now that the public has pushed back. The fact they all changed their tone away from taking jobs tells you that it was all just entirely marketing.

    • scottyah 33 minutes ago

      Seems to me that they were mostly right, and the message was received by the right people. No need to ensure it gets distributed to the wrong people.

    • yoyohello13 23 minutes ago

      All the CEOs very quickly changed their messaging after Altman's house got molotoved.

  • tempodox 35 minutes ago

    But the propaganda deluge was a smash hit so far, HN is drowning in “AI” BS, and astroturfers and spin doctors haven’t seen that much business since the cold war. They made more profit than shovel salesmen in the gold rush.

charcircuit 30 minutes ago

Everyone lost access. What even is mainstream news these days.

AustinDev 1 hour ago

They could easily take the weights if they wanted. I don't believe they meaningfully lost access.

  • Onavo 1 hour ago

    If they use the defence production act, would Dario be even able to resign in protest?

    • AustinDev 1 hour ago

      If they wanted to officially take the weights the DPA would work and Dario could do nothing. If they wanted to do it in clandestine manner no one could stop them and no one would know. It's very likely they already have all the weights from all the frontier models. I mean all the frontier models are capable of being served from AWS Bedrock so the weights aren't exactly locked in some air-gapped vault.

      It would be easy to make a national security justification to take the weights in a clandestine manner especially because Anthropic supposedly got caught giving China access to the model through a cutout.

    • rurban 33 minutes ago

      John Cook resigned, so Dario might resign also. But he would make it public, so they won't do it

  • HlessClaudesman 49 minutes ago

    Who will make them the next set of weights?

    If a government can just seize the product of someone else's labour, either they will end up as slave owners or without willing workers.

    • dofm 43 minutes ago

      Serious question: do you think the NSA aren't training their own LLMs? (With or without Anthropic and OpenAI's help)

      It's a perfect technology for their uses, they get a big chunk of a $100 billion black budget, and they've had access to the research for at least as long as we have.

      • HlessClaudesman 40 minutes ago

        I don't think there is much overlap between people capable of building cutting edge LLM's and the people who want to build a cutting edge LLM for the government.

        • dofm 31 minutes ago

          The NSA managed to deliberately insert a backdoor into elliptic-curve cryptography right under the noses of everyone capable of making elliptic-curve cryptography.

          I wouldn't count them out.

          • tux3 11 minutes ago

            Mathematicians in academia are paid a little less than AI researchers. Companies are willing to pay billions to steal the few people capable of driving development of frontier LLMs from each other. Cryptographers don't quite enjoy the same popularity.

      • polytely 36 minutes ago

        They probably also have an insane dataset

      • ben_w 35 minutes ago

        > Serious question: do you think the NSA aren't training their own LLMs?

        Given the evergreen discussion of "are these companies making a profit"*, I think any LLMs that the NSA (or any other government agency worldwide) may be making are quite far from the leading edge.

        * Person A: "they are making a loss!" Person B: "Only if you count training, they make a profit on inference, look at what it costs to run comparable open models on generic cloud servers" A: "Sure, but if they don't train new models they'll be left behind, so they're still making a loss"

        That and the way compute is now measured in GW, I think even random low budget vloggers just getting started would be able to spot if the NSA was doing anything significant just from the extra heat emissions or power plants getting built.

        • ACCount37 31 minutes ago

          Model training does NOT dominate the model costs.

          The rate of inference compute to training compute is ~10:1, for popular frontier models. Models are routinely overtrained past the Chinchilla optimum now because it makes an immense amount of economic sense to do so.

          Worse the more niche and unused your models get, but when this "making a loss" fuckery pops up, it's usually about the big guys like Anthropic, OpenAI, GDM and maybe xAI and Meta. Of which only the latter can be accused of not selling enough inference to offset the training runs.

          The real money sinks are: R&D and infrastructure buildouts.

      • stronglikedan 33 minutes ago

        > do you think the NSA aren't training their own LLMs?

        They probably already have access to Sentinel, so they wouldn't need to train their own.

      • dgellow 29 minutes ago

        You cannot really hide the amount of compute required to train an LLM. Do we have actual clues that NASA is training their own frontier model?

      • segmondy 28 minutes ago

        Serious question, do you realize that the NSA are mere mortals? Do you realize how much it takes to train a model? Does the NSA make their own chips or planes? The NSA buys a lot of technology because they can't make their own.

        • convolvatron 24 minutes ago

          NSA has had their own supercomputing program for decades. they design and produce their own large scale machines. chips, fabrics, arithmetic units, all of it. they also employ quite a number of hardcore mathematicians, computer scientists, and systems wranglers. if they decided it was of strategic importance there is absolutely no reason they couldn't train their own models.

      • xeubie 11 minutes ago

        I can't say what they're doing now because I worked for the NSA 15 years ago but the view of them as an omnipotent power is a product of Hollywood. The government is good at throwing an ungodly amount of resources at something to get a result, and so they are often the source of original development of technologies. The private sector has always been much better at building a technology to greater sophistication and efficiency. There may be blue badgers in Fort Meade trying to train models but there is no chance they are competitive with the frontier AI companies. It's like saying the government has an amazing home-grown fighter aircraft that is beyond what Lockheed has ever made...they delegate that stuff to private companies for a reason.

      • doug_durham 5 minutes ago

        The NSA is government agency. They are certainly not training any world class LLMs. They probably have some specialized fine tunings of existing models, but that's it. They don't have the capacity.

  • infinite_spin 48 minutes ago

    the success of mythos isn't from model weights, it's from the harness and toolset it has access to

    • dofm 45 minutes ago

      I agree but that's even easier to exfiltrate, surely.

      • nickthegreek 13 minutes ago

        given some time, surely. but that seems harder with the model turned off.

    • krzyk 40 minutes ago

      Is it really?

      Harness is important for model performance, but weights are surely mode important, without that you would have haiku doing the work.

Madmallard 1 hour ago

Doesn't make any sense. They could just force them to provide Mythos to the federal government.

  • wan23 1 hour ago

    You misunderstand - the government issued a directive to Anthropic that effectively forced them to pull access from everyone, even their own employees.

    • hk__2 1 hour ago

      The directive was to remove access to non-Americans, not to pull access from everyone. It’s because Anthropic cannot verify the identity of its users that it pulled access from everyone, not because the government explicitely requested that.

      • greatpatton 1 hour ago

        If their operation team is not US based that's going to be difficult to operate. They would have to reorganize the whole company as I'm pretty sure that they are not employing only US citizen.

        • msm_ 1 hour ago

          >I'm pretty sure that they are not employing only US citizen

          Understatement. They have 14 offices, only 4 of them are in the US (6 are in EMEA, 4 in APAC).

      • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

        > directive was to remove access to non-Americans

        Did Hegseth pull his supply-chain risk BS?

        • sailfast 57 minutes ago

          No - this was a separate power unrelated to the supply chain risk which is still in effect.

          • scottyah 23 minutes ago

            Well, kinda in effect. He lacked the authority to make the call, and it is quite obviously being ignored by most suppliers. If it were actually enforced, I believe no companies that are contractors for the DoD could even host Anthropic- like GCP, Azure, and AWS. Perhaps they are currently figuring out how to get off all cloud provider govclouds, but I doubt it.

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    > They could just force them to provide Mythos to the federal government

    The DPA only gives that power to the President [1].

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Production_Act_of_1950

    • d--b 1 hour ago

      Maybe GP was treating Trump to the royal "they"

      • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

        Which is a fundamental mistake to make with the U.S. government, even if we’re talking only about the executive branch, even if we’re only talking about DoD, even if we’re only talking about the IC.

      • flybarrel 47 minutes ago

        doubt Trump would accept that pronoun

  • aleqs 1 hour ago

    Yeah... NSA literally has MITM proxies/interception of any traffic they want inside every major US tech company (based on my reading/following of Snowden leaks and others). Anthropic wouldn't be able to exist without implicit NSA approval. This article reads more like a marketing piece for Anthropic/Mythos... and ends by talking about how much NSA wants Anthropic models.

    Propaganda.

    • strictnein 1 hour ago

      > NSA literally has MITM proxies/interception of any traffic they want inside every major US tech company

      No, they don't.

      • vintermann 1 hour ago

        It's back to the question of how much you should give the benefit of doubt to powerful people who openly lie.

        • strictnein 1 hour ago

          It's just not technically feasible, so there's nothing to lie about. They're not MITMing petabytes/sec across dozens (hundreds?) of companies and they haven't broken TLS1.3.

          If I have a box at Digital Ocean and I'm communicating with it with TLS1.3 using a Let's Encrypt cert that I generated, where, exactly, does this magical MITM box come into play?

          • aleqs 51 minutes ago

            Of course it's feasible, you just intercept the traffic post-decryption on the cloud/server side. You don't control how/where your traffic to 3p cloud services is decrypted.

          • drdexebtjl 43 minutes ago

            That "box" is a virtual machine, no?

            Do you know what hypervisor is managing it? :)

            • chews 27 minutes ago

              ... not your machines, not your crypto...

      • ai_critic 1 hour ago
        • parineum 1 hour ago

          How are they going to MITM communications with certs that never left my machine?

          Are you suggesting they broke TLS or that they've somehow acquired every private cert generated?

          • aleqs 54 minutes ago

            You just intercept the traffic after its decrypted on the server side, or are you suggesting you somehow send encrypted traffic that never gets decrypted?

      • chews 1 hour ago

        [flagged]

        • strictnein 1 hour ago

          Yes, you have collected a lot of random bits of information from over a decade ago. I'm sure everything you say is still relevant today, especially the conspiracy nonsense.

          Some of us actually work in security, while others think the NSA and CIA are some magically powerful orgs.

          Explain how, even with the mystical Room 641A, the NSA can't break a TLS1.3 protected communication channel without either party knowing about it. Assume you have generated a cert with Let's Encrypt. How, exactly, does that work?

          • aleqs 50 minutes ago

            Explain to me how you are going to encrypt your LLM API calls with your let's encrypt cert.

            There are also multiple ways/places traffic you send to typical cloud/tech company is decrypted and can be intercepted. (Surprised I have to point this out to someone who 'actually works in security ' lol)

            Not to mention US tech companies fully cooperate with the NSA in many cases and are aware of this going on.

            • chews 14 minutes ago

              why is europe going to such great lengths to build datacenters and ensure they have no connection to US jurisdiction... GDPR means nothing if there is a persistent threat installed on every instance.

          • chews 20 minutes ago

            you compel the host under similar threat of non-existance to grant you view of the hypervisor. you're not running on bare metal with alternate TPM's that arent the Intel IMU (also backdoor'd) so you're just as pwnable.

            now say you're doing this on a raspberry pi or other openhardware like a librum machine with a yubikey hsm on local wifi or physical ethernet... you may have a shot at the privacy you're looking for.

        • XMPPwocky 58 minutes ago

          > This was their third office space, serving as their headquarters before they outgrew it and eventually relocated to Market Square at 1355 Market Street in 2012. The arab spring twitter uprising was fully a CIA/NSA operation.

          To be clear, the claim you're making is that because Twitter has their third corporate office in the same building as an AT&T switching center, and US intelligence used a room in AT&T's switching center for surveillance, then Twitter must have been controlled by US intelligence? And thus the Arab Spring uprising, where Twitter was used, was "fully a CIA/NSA operation"?

          • chews 35 minutes ago

            Yes, twitter was used by US 3 letter agencies to assist in the arab spring. To be able to do it in a surreptitious way they were asked to move to that building and get access to all private DMs, and for doing so they got a fat tax break to move to "blighted" market street current location. All of those things fit the timeline and snowden capability disclosures.

            The CIA venture arm InQTel invested in Dataminr a company that twitter was also a major shareholder. https://theintercept.com/2016/04/14/in-undisclosed-cia-inves...

    • micromacrofoot 1 hour ago

      the NSA isn't a bunch of super soldiers, they're cops with too much access, it doesn't take a genius to outsmart a cop

      • john_strinlai 20 minutes ago

        >they're cops with too much access, it doesn't take a genius to outsmart a cop

        the nsa has an unlimited budget and spend a good portion of that budget recruiting some of the smartest people in the country. while they dont have super powers, they also arent the town cop who took a 6 month course after high school then joined the force.

        it does no good to hold them up as mythical figures. it also does no good to pretend they are bumbling idiots.

        (every math phd i am acquainted with has been approached by nsa recruiters. none of them have been approached by police agencies.)

        • schoen 15 minutes ago

          I appreciate the balance here.

          Some of the smartest people I know have worked on fighting NSA, but they had a drastically smaller budget than NSA itself, and the mental availability bias is skewed by the fact that the "fighting NSA" people talked about their work all the time, while the "being NSA" people generally didn't.

          I do know one extremely smart person who went to work there, and I witnessed a failed recruitment of another extremely smart person.

        • micromacrofoot 14 minutes ago

          > every math phd i am acquainted with has been approached by nsa recruiters.

          how many of them took them up on the offer, and how many are in leadership roles?

          it takes a very narrow range of personality to want to be a cop, which at the end of the day is a government job... the only people they make rich are contractors

          I'm not saying there aren't smart people working there but it's ridiculous to assume they have an iron grasp on all communication from the top tech companies in the world, while also monitoring half the world's governments... they just don't

    • yard2010 1 hour ago

      Please provide sources for such bold claims

      • aleqs 42 minutes ago
        • schoen 20 minutes ago

          I worked on these cases at EFF and I'm skeptical of the automatic "NSA has access to everything" intuition.

          What we learned from that era includes things like

          (1) spy agencies are incredibly aggressive and pursue tons of different angles to get access to things

          (2) spy agencies have a lot of money

          (3) spy agencies often have interpretations of law that would surprise the public or legal experts (and sometimes courts have issued sealed rulings permitting them to do things that surprise the public or legal experts later when they're unsealed)

          (4) some people throughout different parts of society assume culturally that companies in a country "should" generally help the spy agencies of that country's government because they are the "good guys" or "on the same team" or whatever

          These things are all pretty bad and scary, but they still don't imply absolutely infinite power or access, because all of them come with different kinds of pushback. People also just tell them no!

          I want to write an article with a colleague about the continuing role of culture here, because I think there are companies or industries where the default reaction is to want to cooperate with the government, and others where the default reaction is not that.

          There are certainly secret things that have never come out, e.g. whatever Senator Wyden keeps alluding to, and what kind of program or authority was behind the interception of hardware shipments to covertly tamper with them, and whether there is a bulk financial data interception program, and presumably lots of other stuff. I don't agree with these things, and I want them to be exposed and stopped, and I also don't think they constitute infinite power over all parts of the tech industry.

  • graemep 1 hour ago

    The current position seems to be no-one has access, not even Anthropic employees. What powers does the US government have to force them to provide access? If they have that power why did they not use it to force them to provide their products for military use?

  • bluGill 1 hour ago

    Probably not. The US constitution limits what government can force on the people. If the NSA tries to force something that will spend years in court (if anyone wants to fight)

    • folkrav 1 hour ago

      The constitution limits a lot of things that this administration has done regardless.

    • stackghost 48 minutes ago

      > The US constitution limits what government can force on the people.

      The US constitution also prohibits:

      - refusing to spend money that congress has appropriated

      - dismantling congressionally-created federal agencies without congressional authorization

      - directing federal agencies to selectively apply the law according to the preference of the executive

      - giving control of federal agencies to individuals who have not been appointed by the legislative branch

      - terminating, detaining, or deporting people without due process

      - retaliation against private citizens or corporations for speech protected under the first amendment

      - discriminating on protected grounds under the equal protections clause

      ... and yet the administration has done all these things with impunity while effete judges wring their hands and write sternly-worded letters. The US constitution demonstrably no longer has any force or effect.

dofm 48 minutes ago

If Mythos is still running internally, the NSA still have some access to it. It's just crazy to believe there aren't CIA and/or NSA plants (tacitly acknowledged or otherwise) inside Anthropic and OpenAI.

But Mythos is still only an advanced LLM so I am not sure what all this breathy fuss is about; it sounds like the PR war more than anything.

If the NSA aren't themselves training technologies that are at least as powerful, that would modestly surprise me.

Not that you need an LLM to monitor the risks to the USA. You just need Tulsi Gabbard's emails.

  • SV_BubbleTime 38 minutes ago

    I think it’s beyond a mastery of PR. They literally called it Mythos and built a literal myth around it. I mean… maybe people just want the soap opera.

ransom1538 9 minutes ago

NSA has produced nothing. Does nothing. Why don't we just have them pick up garbage on the freeway to help out the tax payers? Let Anthropic and other adults push spying forward.

  • ibejoeb 4 minutes ago

    They're great at building datacenters and running massive archival operations.

  • taftster 3 minutes ago

    Have we become reddit here? I mean, you probably have some sympathy and upvotes from fellow readers, but this isn't pushing the conversation forward at all.

    Any citations to your statement that NSA produces nothing? Or do you have a strong argument or evidence to support this?

swader999 1 hour ago

Kind of crazy actually. Other models are catching up fast, they all can find the vulnerabilities in our (and by our I mean everyone's) underlying infra very fast. It takes a very long time to fix, review, and finally deploy these fixes. There really isn't much time left.