The maker of Claude wants the world to keep one option open. The timing is the tell.
Richard Socher's new $650 million startup wants to build an AI that can research and improve itself indefinitely — and he insists it will actually ship products.
As the race to build ever more powerful artificial intelligence systems accelerates, one of the industry's leading players is ...
Anthropic warns self‑improving AI could outpace human control, urging a slowdown as risks grow and systems begin advancing on ...
Anthropic calls on world leaders to weigh AI risks as systems approach ability to improve without human oversight.
Anthropic has warned that recursive-self-improving AI could be on the horizon, but the truth is the company is more ...
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The Problem With ‘AI Arms Control'

Anthropic is calling for joint efforts to slow the development of AI, using arms control agreements as a model. But that's a ...
Anthropic's internal data shows Claude writing most of its code, an early signal of recursive self-improvement in AI.
Long-developed recursive intelligence systems support Krytheon's Human-Centric approach to treasury, FX, and enterprise ...
Recursion—the computational capacity to embed elements within elements of the same kind—has been lauded as the intellectual cornerstone of language, tool use and mathematics. A multi-institutional ...