Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has sat down for an interview with Bloomberg Originals, where he discussed several topics surrounding AI and AI development, along with geopolitical impacts and Anthropic's internal governance system intended to maintain checks and balances during the quest to ethically develop artificial intelligence.
Amodei was asked, given the power of artificial intelligence and how Anthropic is one of the leading companies in the space with Claude, Claude Code, and its now-banned Mythos-class AI models, why the US government wouldn't take over the company to ensure its tools are used safely. Amodei responded by saying that almost every major technology was built by or with the involvement of the government, and that AI is the first revolutionary-level technology that is predominantly being built by the private sector, and that isn't something Amodei agrees with, nor would it be what he would have chosen if he were given a choice.
Although Amodei believes the government shouldn't completely take over Anthropic, he is scared of both companies having "this technology" and the government having it. So, the middle ground is public governance tactics, which Amodei says is slowly being introduced to Anthropic. For example, Amodei says Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust can appoint and remove a majority of board members and, through that authority, can even remove him as CEO. The idea behind this structure is to prevent the company from being blown ethically off course through a cabal of upper leadership.
Speaking of the government taking over AI companies, the US government recently exerted its power by banning the export of Anthropic's latest and the world's most powerful AI models, the Mythos-class models. The ban came after Anthropic's own investor, Amazon, called the White House to sound the alarm about Mythos' vulnerabilities.




