US used Anthropic's Claude during the Venezuela raid, WSJ reports


FILE PHOTO: Anthropic logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Feb 13 (Reuters) - Anthropic's artificial-intelligence ⁠model Claude was used in the U.S. military's operation ⁠to capture former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, the Wall ‌Street Journal reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.

Claude's deployment came via Anthropic's partnership with data firm Palantir Technologies , whose platforms are widely ​used by the Defense Department and ⁠federal law enforcement, the report ⁠added.

Reuters could not immediatelyverify the report. The U.S. Defense Department, ⁠the ‌White House, Anthropic and Palantir did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.

The Pentagon is pushing top ⁠AI companies, including OpenAI and Anthropic, to make ​their artificial-intelligence ‌tools available on classified networks without many of the standard ⁠restrictions that ​the firms apply to users, Reuters exclusively reported on Wednesday.

Many AI companies are building custom tools for the U.S. military, most of ⁠which are available only on unclassified ​networks typically used for military administration. Anthropic is the only one that is available in classified settings through third parties, but the ⁠government is still bound by the company's usage policies.

The usage policies of Anthropic, which raised $30 billion in its latest funding round and is now valued at $380 billion, forbid using Claude to ​support violence, design weapons or carry ⁠out surveillance.

The United States captured President Nicolas Maduro in an audacious ​raid and whisked him to New ‌York to face drug-trafficking charges early ​in January.

(Reporting by Carlos Méndez and Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Chris Reese and Alan Barona)

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