45 comments

  • tombert 3 hours ago
    When my sister and I would play monopoly as kids, we had lost the manual so whenever we didn’t like the outcome of whatever happened, we would make up rules about what was right. Technically then, it was very easy stay compliant while still being able to do well because we could rewrite the rules.

    Also, since I was older I feel like I was able to get away with those redefinitions a lot more often…

    • smallmancontrov 2 hours ago
      The word "lawful" always seems to get dragged out when people in power are doing some especially heinous rulemaking, like throwing a hissy fit over a single company trying to voluntarily draw a line at domestic surveillance and fully automated killchains.
      • WarmWash 1 hour ago
        Anthropic wanted the ability to verify compliance whereas OAI and Google are fine with "trust us". Which is how it always is, and always has been.

        For better or worse, the government is the one who audits, and has it's own internal systems for self audits. So no one except them tells them what they can or cannot do. The government would never put itself in a position where civilians died because Amodei didn't like the vibe of the case being worked.

        In a way it's wild that people are upset that the government didn't put a billionaire megacorp CEO in the drivers seat of intelligence.

        • ffsm8 31 minutes ago
          It's incredible if you honestly believe that.

          The only reason this blew up at all was because of the insane overreach by the DoW after anthropic voiced their concern.

          It was well within anthropic right to do so, as it was part of their contract.

          And it would've been very understandable that the DoW balked at that, though the real issue would be the incompetence how the contract was able to get through with that in it. But with that contact in place, the only sensible action would've been to terminate the contract and move on. Frankly, nobody would've cared.

          But the DoW felt it just had to go further... And their chosen action was just an insane overreach - hence the controversy.

        • trhway 46 minutes ago
          >So no one except them tells them what they can or cannot do.

          you're missing "laundering the responsibility" approach - find a lawyer who writes that the thing is legal in his opinion, and voila.

      • bko 1 hour ago
        A private corporation can choose not to sell to the government. A lot of them do exactly this. A lot of hoops to jump through.

        However, if they do sell to the government, they shouldn't have some sneaky way to exert control over decision making using their products. We're a country of laws, and for better or for worse, these laws are made by elected officials and those appointed by elected officials.

        Why an American company wouldn't want American defense to have the most capable tools at their disposal is a different matter all together, but here we are.

        • hvb2 30 minutes ago
          Your court system wasn't designed for the Executive branch acting with actual bad intent.

          You're a country of laws, but if enforcing them takes months if not years... Then during that time, you're the wild wild west

        • joshuamorton 1 hour ago
          > they shouldn't have some sneaky way to exert control over decision making using their products.

          why not, many companies have all sorts of rules you agree to when using their products, including many legal ("lawful") things. Are you saying that the government as a client should be unbound by contractual obligations that apply to other clients?

          • throwup238 1 hour ago
            Governments negotiate their own contracts with their own terms of service. That’s one of the hoops government contractors jump through.
            • thayne 37 minutes ago
              That's fine as long as the company can choose they don't like those terms and refuse to do business. But in this case the government threatened, and carried out the threat, of classifying Anthropic as a "supply chain threat" if they didn't agree to the government's terms.
            • kube-system 48 minutes ago
              Not only that, but some of the contractual terms are defined by federal acquisition law, et al.
            • joshuamorton 38 minutes ago
              I want to be clear, I agree. I have no objection to unique government contracts. I'm specifically curious about GPs position that a government contractor should be (ethically?) bound from putting contractual obligations on government use of their service.

              Like the various ai providers limit lawful use like creating AI pornography. I think it would be reasonable to keep a contractual restriction against that even when working with the government.

        • tombert 1 hour ago
          This administration has made it very clear that they will do what they can to change laws whenever convenient, without congressional oversight, whether or not they are "allowed" to.

          Trump implemented tariffs he wasn't allowed to immediately, he started a war he probably wasn't allowed to in order to (allegedly) distract from associating with a pedophile, he wrote an executive order trying to undo the fourteenth amendment, he has actively been abducting and imprisoning lawful residents (and even citizens!) and actively pushed for racial profiling to do so.

          If a company feels like the government will simply rewrite the laws in order to advance any kind of political whim (including to be weaponized against that very company!), it's not wrong or even weird for them to want to add safeguards to their product.

          To be clear, this isn't weird or uncommon. Lots the stuff you sign in the EULA isn't preventing you from doing things that are "illegal".

    • caycep 46 minutes ago
      I was going to post about whether there were still "laws" in the US, but this post gets the point across much better
    • bko 2 hours ago
      I'd prefer our elected officials own the manual, accepting the fact that [person I don't like] could be in power and they can re-write the rules, then a private billion dollar corporation. Especially when it comes to defense.
      • mc32 1 hour ago
        Ha! If the Congress did diddly squat about eavesdropping on them by organizations that aren’t supposed to spy on citizens back in the Obama days (we also spied on allies’s governments but that’s kinda what all of them do) there is no hope in them reining things back at all… for mere hoi polloi.
        • bko 1 hour ago
          I guess we have to appoint Amodei and Altman as our benevolent dictators to keep Congress in check!
    • cucumber3732842 3 hours ago
      The big reason it's "obvious" when tech megacorps do it is because big tech is new to the game and doesn't have an existing regulatory capture system already up and running and legitimized like medical, civil engineering, energy, agriculture, chemical, etc, do.

      If this were 3M making nasty stuff for Northrop to put in bombs and drop on brown people or Exxon scheming up something bad in Alaska or bulldozing a national park for solar panels or some other legacy BigCo doing slimy things that are in the interests of them and the government but against the interest of the public they'd have 40yr of preexisting trade group publications, bought and paid for academic and media chatter, etc, etc, that they could point to and say "look, this is fine because the stuff we paid into in advance to legitimize these sorts of things as they come up says it is" though obviously they'd use very different words.

      • GeekyBear 2 hours ago
        > big tech is new to the game and doesn't have an existing regulatory capture system already up and running

        The career officials in the Obama FTC started proceedings for an antitrust lawsuit against Google over a decade ago.

        The political appointees (of both parties) shut it down.

        It seems to me that regulatory capture has been working for Google for some time now.

        • WarmWash 1 hour ago
          Google has a monopoly because of the internet's insistence on ad blocking, and outright indignant refusal to dare pay a greedy company for thinking they could ask for money for a "free" web service.

          It's basically impossible to get off the ground competing against google when 30-40% of people are just freeloading your service, and 80-90% think the internet is an ethereal realm that everyone could have ad and subscription access to if we could only agree to starve these greedy middle men.

          • tombert 1 hour ago
            I've heard dozens of people say this (and I've even said it myself) but I don't think it actually holds water. People will pay for things if those things don't suck, and it's not even hard to find examples of that (even with Google products no less!).

            For search, Kagi has had a growing fanbase for a couple years now, but let's take things that have been easy to get for free for decades: Movies.

            People have been, with relatively impunity, able to torrent movies for free for a very long time. It's not hard, and the only way you're paying for it is ads for hot MILFs in your area. And yet, despite this having always been an option, somehow Netflix and Hulu and Disney+ and HBO Max have managed to make fairly successful businesses selling movies that could have been pirated.

            I could get YouTube as ad-free with an ad blocker, but I pay for YouTube Premium. I could get all my music for free with Redacted, but I use YouTube music, or I buy CDs. I could torrent video games but I just buy them off Steam or GOG.

            This isn't new either; there were thousands of free forums on the internet in the late 90's, but yet people still bought accounts on Something Awful for quite awhile (and indeed still buy accounts, but with much lower numbers).

            We can certainly argue about how much value these companies are providing, and we can argue about how it's annoying how there's a million different streaming services now and how that's really irritating, but my point stands: people do pay for things on the internet.

            We don't have to accept that companies need to sell all our data. We don't have to accept being bombarded with ads. We don't have to accept that people won't pay to use services.

        • tombert 1 hour ago
          I mean it's basically an extremely high-stakes version of the (possibly apocryphal) Upton Sinclair quote: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it."

          Most people (at least the people I've talked to, which admittedly is somewhat of a lefty bubble but I think even more generally) agree that companies getting to or close to "monopoly" status is a pretty bad thing, and that they should be broken up. Political candidates get a lot of social credit for claiming that they're going to do exactly that. The moment that they actually get into a position where they actually could do something about it, they suddenly remember who their campaign contributors are, and can then create reasons to avoid actually solving any of these problems.

          Very occasionally we have successes in this field, like the breakup of Standard Oil and AT&T), but of course both of these sort of became toothless since we basically allowed both of these companies to re-acquire each other and form the same problems again.

          There are similar reasons as to why politicians will occasionally push for regulations to not allow themselves to invest in companies that their policies affect, but somehow manages to never get through.

          Politicians are very rarely punished for breaking political promises, but often rewarded for making the promises. They are also rewarded by their corporate overlords for breaking these promises.

          • GeekyBear 3 minutes ago
            > Political candidates get a lot of social credit for claiming that they're going to do exactly that. The moment that they actually get into a position where they actually could do something about it, they suddenly remember who their campaign contributors are, and can then create reasons to avoid actually solving any of these problems.

            I read a good Google adjacent example of this in yesterday's NYTimes:

            > Mr. Brin, a Google co-founder and one of the world’s richest people, is a longtime friend of Mr. Newsom, the California governor. Both men attended each other’s weddings. But now Mr. Brin pulled Mr. Newsom aside to a different part of the property for a serious talk. Mr. Brin told Mr. Newsom that he could not stand the state’s proposed billionaire tax... Mr. Newsom, who had never seemed inclined to support the tax, came out the next month and pledged to defeat it.

            https://archive.ph/LTkix

          • Aerroon 1 hour ago
            >they suddenly remember who their campaign contributors are, and can then create reasons to avoid actually solving any of these problems.

            There are very real concerns when you break up a company though. Rockefeller's wealth shot up a lot when Standard Oil was broken up. That could easily make a politician that's "politician out to get the big companies" into "politician making billionaires richer."

            • tombert 1 hour ago
              Tough to say for sure, but I think it's probably still better to have more billionaires if there's more competition.

              I wasn't around during the breakup, but my parents told me that phone service got considerably better and cheaper after the AT&T breakup, which makes enough sense to me: if a consumer can drop you for someone else, you have a reason to try and compete on service and/or price.

      • SecretDreams 3 hours ago
        > If this were 3M making nasty stuff for Northrop to put in bombs and drop on brown people or Exxon scheming up something bad in Alaska or bulldozing a national park for solar panels or some other legacy BigCo doing slimy things that are in the interests of them and the government but against the interest of the public they'd have 40yr of preexisting trade group publications, bought and paid for academic and media chatter, etc, etc, they could point to and say "look, this is fine because the stuff we paid into in advance to legitimize these sorts of things as they come up says it is" though obviously they'd use very different words.

        My friend, this paragraph needed some periods. I could not follow what you were trying to say - but it seemed interesting enough to consider retyping.

        • Vachyas 2 hours ago
          Good comment, and I agree lol

          I read it twice (admittedly quickly) but couldn't grasp the point even though I felt like it was there.

          • fwip 1 hour ago
            It's not really hard to read.

            If this were a traditionally evil company, the work to legalize the evil things would have started forty years ago.

  • anematode 3 hours ago
    Who could have seen this one coming. From yesterday: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/google-ai-pentagon-classified-u... ("Hundreds of Google workers urge CEO to refuse classified AI work with Pentagon").

    Any AI researcher who continues to work here is morally compromised.

    • orochimaaru 3 hours ago
      Why is it morally wrong for a US citizen to work with their government?
      • finghin 3 hours ago
        The acts of the government being wrong in an upsetting amount of cases would be a big reason.
      • fooker 2 hours ago
        Because, we have pretty convincing historical precedent that 'just following orders' does not work as a defense when your government does something indefensible.
        • ReptileMan 2 hours ago
          Worked just well for the paperclip guys.
      • tyre 2 hours ago
        It’s not, but legal is not the same as ethical.

        For a long time, and probably still, it was legal for the US to torture enemy combatants. It was never ethical.

        • rob74 2 hours ago
          If you add to that the very broad limits of what the current administration considers "legal" (as in "pretty much anything we want to do"), I can understand feeling uneasy as a Google employee...
        • gigatree 2 hours ago
          You’d need some shared ethical/moral framework to make that claim, which doesn’t really seem to exist anymore
          • yibg 2 hours ago
            You don't need a shared moral framework to come to a personal moral conclusion.
            • lo_zamoyski 1 hour ago
              What does that mean? How does one come to a personal moral conclusion? Vibes?

              (I take "moral framework" to mean a principled stance that gives objective grounding for a moral judgement. I agree that we can come to a moral judgement without putting it through a systematic and discursive defense, and I reject the notion that there are many moralities or that they are arbitrary, but it is also true that diverging conceptions of the basis of morality will frustrate agreement. Stopping at personal moral judgement does not lend itself to fruitful dialogue and understanding, as it constraints the domain of what is intersubjectively knowable.)

      • blks 33 minutes ago
        Besides all the questionable and illegal stuff that the current government does, a lot of people don’t want to work on technologies that kill people.
      • josefx 2 hours ago
        What makes you think that Googles AI experts are US citizens?
        • kube-system 40 minutes ago
          100% of the Google employees who would be working on "classified AI work" are US citizens by law.
          • mattlondon 18 minutes ago
            So what, they won't be using any of the existing Google Gemini models of infra then? Because all of Google - from Gemini to the data center infra etc - has (and still is) worked on by non-US persons even - gasp - outside the US. They'll do a complete clean-room ground up bootstrap of all the research and infrastructure from zero?

            Seems unlikely.

            • kube-system 9 minutes ago
              You of course don't have to reinvent science, but it is in fact standard practice to do infrastructure from the literal ground up for this type of work.
      • hashmap 2 hours ago
        working to directly advance a product used substantially to oppress people via surveillance or war crimes, when you have many other choices, is immoral. easy.
      • _vertigo 3 hours ago
        It’s not morally wrong per-se but just because you are working with your government does not mean what you’re doing is necessarily moral
        • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
          Just because you are working with your government does not mean what you’re doing is necessarily immoral, either.
          • _alternator_ 3 hours ago
            Correct. It depends. For example, it might depend on what the collaboration is likely to result in. Perhaps it would be more likely to be moral there were some boundaries in place, like "no mass domestic surveillance" or "no fully autonomous weapons".

            Because the US government currently believes it is legal to blow up civilian drug traffickers and wage war without congressional approval. So at some point, yes, collaboration is immoral.

            • nradov 2 hours ago
              The US military has deployed fully autonomous weapons since at least 1979, and potential adversaries are now doing the same. For better or worse that ship has sailed.
              • _alternator_ 2 hours ago
                Look, a dumb bomb is a fully autonomous weapon once it's launched. Let's be real: an LLM making decisions on who to target and when and where to launch munitions represents a meaningful change in our concept of autonomous weapons.
              • Forgeties79 2 hours ago
                So we are wrong to express any opposition or desire to maybe raise the bar here? Aren’t we supposed to be “the good guys”? Or should we just accept a role as the menace of the world, wildly throwing its weight around whenever we have an unscrupulous president?
                • nradov 2 hours ago
                  Those questions are moot. There are situations where it's simply impossible to have a human in the loop because reaction time is too slow or the environment is too dangerous or communication links are unreliable. Russia is deploying fully autonomous weapons to attack Ukraine today and they will be selling those weapons (or licensing the technology) to their allies. There is no option to stop. And let's please not have any nonsense suggestions that we can somehow convince Russia / China / Iran / North Korea to sign a binding, enforceable treaty banning such weapons: that's never going to happen.
                  • t-3 2 hours ago
                    There's always an option to stop. We can choose civility over barbarity, stop trying to kill people over 1000+ year old dick waving contests, and stop threatening each other with doomsday weapons because your grandpa shot my grandpa. Just because our leaders are too stupid and cowardly doesn't mean there's no option.
                    • nradov 1 hour ago
                      Sounds good! Please convince Vladimir Putin to choose civility over barbarity, then get back to us so we can discuss options.
                      • Forgeties79 1 hour ago
                        We aren’t Russian and Putin is not our leader. We can choose how we behave and operate. This is like saying we should use chemical weapons if someone else deploys one. You’re speaking as if it’s all so binary. “Do what they do or you lose.”
          • t-3 2 hours ago
            In a logical or mathematical sense, sure, but when it's the US government and a huge surveillance-tech company it's pretty necessarily immoral (at least in an American context where harming liberty is immoral - other cultures disagree).
          • Jtarii 3 hours ago
            Hegseth bombed a girls school in Iran last month. I think it's fair to doubt the moral worth of anyone assisting this admin.
            • somenameforme 2 hours ago
              I don't think that was intentional, but invading countries while trying to distract them with negotiations, randomly assassinating leaders and hoping everything just turns out well, threatening to "destroy civilizations", targeting bridges and more, all while aiding and abetting Israel which is intentionally destroying pharmaceutical, educational, and other such civilian institutions is all 100% intentional.

              In some ways worse than bombing the school was the effort to implicitly deny it. The school was near a military facility, and itself was a military facility in the past. US intelligence screwed up. They should have simply acknowledged what happened and why. Their response just reeked of cowardice and malice at the highest level.

            • conartist6 3 hours ago
              It's ok, they weren't Christian girls, so of course they're in hell now. ...where Pete will go!

              Hey, I think I'm starting to get how this organized religion thing works. Maybe I'll join a few to make sure I go to allllll the good places

              • conartist6 3 hours ago
                [flagged]
                • cooper_ganglia 2 hours ago
                  You should probably give this a second look:

                  https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

                  • conartist6 2 hours ago
                    If speaking vigorously in defense of morality is wrong, I guess that's something I'll just have to live with.
                    • ThrowawayR2 1 hour ago
                      You'll have to live with it somewhere else. Neither HN's administrators nor readership will tolerate that kind of behavior. If you intend to participate on Hacker News over the long term, please take up the suggestion by the other poster to review the guidelines and adhere to them.
                      • conartist6 1 hour ago
                        I thought what I said was borderline, but we seem to believe in free speech in this country and here in this place.

                        And you haven't disagreed with what I said, only how I said it ;)

                        • k12sosse 22 minutes ago
                          They'll say your 1A doesn't exist here
            • xp84 2 hours ago
              Is it your position that any collateral damage in war is unacceptable and makes the one who caused that harm forever evil? Or that the whole world should adopt pacifism so that war is no longer practiced at all.

              If the former, this places a huge incentive on dictatorships like Iran to use the very easy strategy of co-locating all military targets with schools, hospitals, etc. so that any attack on them by anyone is automatically immoral.

              I don’t automatically think everything the US has done (either in Iran this year or in history) is good, best, righteous btw. But positions like yours seem to take for granted that it’s never okay to wage any kind of war.

              Set aside for a moment whether it’s safe to classify the Islamic Republic as a truly evil regime.

              I don’t want to tempt Godwin’s Law, but after seeing how the Left in the US and Europe rallied to the cause of supporting Hamas, I don’t think modern-day “progressives” have the courage to do anything to counter truly bad actors besides to ask them nicely to stop. I’d love to see someone from that political alignment explain where their red lines are, past which they’d morally support a military attack - and yes, even one where we can be nearly certain innocents will also be hurt or killled.

          • Forgeties79 3 hours ago
            Who said otherwise? Clearly it’s about facilitating specific acts by the government. Why are y’all acting like it was so wildly broad? No one said “working with the government is inherently immoral.”
            • cooper_ganglia 2 hours ago
              Literally the parent comment:

              >Any AI researcher who continues to work here is morally compromised.

              • Forgeties79 2 hours ago
                …doing this kind of work with the federal government. That is clearly what they are saying. You stripped all context from the discussion.

                You’re looking for the least defensible, worse interpretation of their comment.

                • cooper_ganglia 1 hour ago
                  No. Their comment was: “Any AI researcher who continues to work here is morally compromised.”

                  But, “…doing this kind of work with the federal government.” is added context that was not there and is based on your own interpretation.

                  The language of the parent comment charges that simply working at a company that is engaging in this makes one complicit in an immoral act, and the complicity itself is immoral. I disagree with all of that.

      • SauciestGNU 1 hour ago
        Because the government is comprised of Nazis now and is waging wars of expansionist conquest abroad and murdering domestic dissidents at home. Anyone working toward enabling that deserves to be on the receiving end of the systems they build.
      • pigpag 2 hours ago
        Weird, why is it morally right for anyone to work with immoral organizations? -- That's what's in the focus, right?

        Whether the current government is immoral, or if government can be philosophically immoral is up to debate. But your question sounds like a deflection to me.

      • Terr_ 31 minutes ago
        You're using a strawman. This was never about just being employed by a government in the most tepid and universal sense.

        Ex: "Why is it morally wrong for a US citizen to work with their government?", asked the employee compiling lists of American citizens of Japanese descent to be rounded up into Internment Camps.

      • IshKebab 2 hours ago
        Because their current government is immoral.
      • unethical_ban 2 hours ago
        Are you intentionally lumping in all civic service in one moral bucket? Is working at the post office morally equivalent to developing panopticon technology to suppress protest and track citizens?
      • hawk_ 1 hour ago
        Sorry to Godwin the thread but the Third Reich would like a word.
      • mattnewton 3 hours ago
        Idk about morality, but it’s certainly a way to stop dystopian mass surveillance nightmares if everyone capable of building one refuses.

        So if you live in the US and don’t want one government agency in the US to have this power (that is ambiguous under current law), one way you can try to avoid it is by refusing to sell it to them and urging others to do the same.

        It’s a long shot sure, but it certainly seems more effective than hoping the legislature wakes up and reigns in the executive these days.

      • psychoslave 3 hours ago
        Given most government policies and direct engagement in all kind of monstrosities over the last millennia, there is really no reason to limit the case to USA, indeed.
      • tastyface 1 hour ago
        Because the current government is a vindictive, murderous, proto-fascist government. (But you know that already.)
    • JeremyNT 1 hour ago
      Also yesterday, on Brin getting cozy with this administration:

      https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/27/us/politics/sergey-brin-g...

    • tjwebbnorfolk 3 hours ago
      Why is it morally compromising to work with the military of the country you live in?
      • plaidthunder 3 hours ago
        I'm not anti-military as a rule but... c'mon. Opinions on the US military vary.

        In extremis, were the people working for Pol Pot just good patriots with no moral culpability?

        We could surely at least agree that there are cases where working for the military of your home country doesn't fully excuse you from your actions.

        In fact, I think international tribunals have existed which operated on just those principles.

      • mrexcess 3 hours ago
        We can all agree that working for the Nazi government’s military would be morally compromising, right?

        You propose that other governments militaries would not be so compromising. Seems reasonable.

        But the question then becomes, what is the operative distinction between the two?

        • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • banannaise 2 hours ago
            "Lawful" as determined by the party executing the action is very different from actually lawful.

            The courts can intervene later, but they can't un-bomb a hospital.

            This is setting aside the obvious problem where governments will often set laws based on self-interest rather than morality, particularly when it comes to military conflict.

          • exe34 2 hours ago
            Lawful use in the US is whatever Dementia Don says it is.
          • CamperBob2 3 hours ago
            This government doesn't GAF what is "lawful" and what isn't. Was what happened to Pretti and Good in Minneapolis lawful? Would you work for ICE/CBP with no qualms at all?

            See also the new national sport of hunting for fishing boats off the South American coast. Is that "lawful?"

            And yes, since you went there: everything the Nazis did was "lawful." To the extent it wasn't "lawful," they made it "lawful."

            • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
              [flagged]
              • exe34 2 hours ago
                > Don't attack law enforcement with a deadly weapon, whether it's a vehicle or gun.

                How do you attack law enforcement with a gun while on your knees, with your arms pinned behind you and the gun is holstered? It's interesting how we can watch the same video, and some people only see what they are told to see.

    • pixel_popping 22 minutes ago
      Why would they be morally compromised? So the ones building open-source models should be as well because some terrorist will use the model to do nefarious stuff?
    • declan_roberts 3 hours ago
      Thankfully Russia, China, etc have the same qualms as we do in the United States and will refused to send their brightest engineers to work on weapons so they don't become "morally compromised"!!!
      • titzer 2 hours ago
        I don't think the long-term game theory of race to the bottom works out quite how you think.

        "Our enemies would have no qualms building a weapon that will end life on earth! We better build it first because we're the good guys!"

        • declan_roberts 2 hours ago
          Послушайте этого парня!
      • yibg 2 hours ago
        We also used to point to Russia and China as places we don't want to copy.
      • notJim 2 hours ago
        This was the same logic that was used when building nuclear weapons, and many of the scientists involved in that tried to find a different path (most notably Niels Bohr). I think we would be in a much better world if they had been successful. It's good that we're trying again w/ LLMs.
        • mvelbaum 1 hour ago
          it's a good thing nobody listened to them because it's supremely retarded.
      • genxy 1 hour ago
        People in those countries do have qualms, they are people after all and they choose to work in other fields.
      • tensor 2 hours ago
        The US is sure becoming an unfree scary place just like Russia. Keep it up following those role models!
      • gambiting 3 hours ago
        I don't know if you're being sarcastic(sounds like you are!) but indeed a lot of engineers left Russia after the war in Ukraine started as they didn't want to be drafted and didn't want to contribute to the war effort in some way, even if indirectly. Of course, many stayed or even willingly help. See how many engineers from Iran work abroad too, for moral and other reasons.

        The point is - this happens everywhere, it's not just some weird western thing.

        • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • griffzhowl 2 hours ago
            National security can mean protecting a society founded on the values of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

            It can also mean facilitating a militaristic surveillance state.

            Not necessarily the same things, and at some point we might have to choose who's side we're on

          • wood_spirit 2 hours ago
            Just curious, did the move on Greenland and Iran have national security interest? And is it economical or life threatening?
          • wewtyflakes 2 hours ago
            We, the people, ostensibly get to say what these security interests are. Also, the security policy executed on by the state is not some immutable monolith. One can agree or disagree with it as it changes over time, and hopefully, influence its direction to arc towards goodness.
          • d5lt5 2 hours ago
            I did and helped d33ps33k. You are welcome!
    • devin 3 hours ago
      That's what the 7 figure salaries are for.
      • testfrequency 3 hours ago
        It’s funny to me how many progressive people I know and am friends with who work at these AI companies which are marginalized demographics (Trans, Gay, Latino, Black).

        Still have faded Bernie stickers on their cars, No Kings organizers, “fuck SF I’m in the east bay for life fuck tech” - and you all make 7 figures Monday - Friday by supporting the death of society and democracy.

        I don’t dare say anything though because “money is money”, the bay is expensive..but I do sure as shit judge every single person I know who joined OAI, Anthropic, Google, and Meta.

        • foobar_______ 2 hours ago
          Preach. The hypocrisy is startling. I think people started at these companies maybe years ago with "good intentions" and are willing to turn a blind eye. But now, given just how glaring clear it is, I don't think it is really excusable anymore. To be clear, people can work wherever they want including these companies but what kills me is the hypocrisy. They are pathological liars to themselves if they somehow think they aren't complicit.
        • beernet 3 hours ago
          Agreed. Just shows that big money doesn't dilude small character.
        • site-packages1 3 hours ago
          I would suggest looking inwards if this is how you really feel.
          • testfrequency 3 hours ago
            I mean no harm in saying what I said, I love my friends. I just can’t stomach the hypocrisy, it’s what the companies are preying and feeding off of.

            My friends are incredibly bright and good at what they do, it’s why they all have the roles they have. It makes me sad (and frustrated) knowing they are lured in by enough money dangling in front of them that makes them swallow their souls and identity, while fuelling the fire in the same breath.

            I have a deep amount of respect and gratitude for my friends (and anyone else) who chooses to work at non-profits, and more ethical - mission based companies for less. I hate how much these AI companies and roles are offering people, it’s completely forced lots of gifted people into a war machine.

            • site-packages1 3 hours ago
              Do you suspect there is any chance they are fully independent adult human beings with full agency, who have looked at the pros and cons, and chosen to make the choices they did with clear eyes? Do you think there's any context that might square their choices with their own internal principles that don't make them hypocrites? I mean these as real questions. For "friends you love" you really seem to take a dim view of their intelligence.
              • somenameforme 2 hours ago
                One of humanity's greatest weaknesses is cognitive dissonance. People can convince themselves of just about anything. And in some ways intelligence is a burden here. A fool will just do something with a reason of 'f you, that's why.' It's only the clever man that will even bother rationalizing the villain into the hero, and we're great at it. An interesting thought experiment is to ask people if they'd be willing to push a button that would randomly kill a person somewhere in the world for a million dollars. They'd have no direct accountability themselves and their action would be unknown to anybody else.

                People will rationalize themselves into declaring this moral even though it is obviously one of the most overtly amoral actions possible. One friend I have, a rather intelligent guy otherwise, was even trying to create a utilitarian argument that he'd donate some percent of his 'earnings' to life saving charities meaning he'd be saving more life on the net. The fact that if everybody thought and behaved the same way, the entirety of humanity would cease to exist, was a consideration he didn't have a response for. Let alone the fact that he just rationalized his way into justifying near to any deed imaginable, so long as you got paid enough for it.

              • testfrequency 2 hours ago
                I’ll be honest and say it’s made me question and reposition some of my friendships with a number of these friends. Some joined well before we knew the fallout of how AI has affected and impacted society negatively, some have joined in recent years because they were offered 2x their currently already high comp package, and others will take any job they can get (who, admittedly, I judge far less as I know they are just needing to survive in a HCOL city).

                My dim view is more on the AI companies being absurdly overvalued, with too much money to know what to do, which feeds downwards into compensation packages, which lure in “innocent” individuals who can’t say no. It’s not been a healthy market to be vulnerable in, most companies outside AI are just not getting the same funding or can compete at all - and it’s a shit storm.

          • gambiting 3 hours ago
            I'm curious what is that you're suggesting, exactly.
            • site-packages1 3 hours ago
              I made another comment above. People contain multitudes. Different contexts, different choices, not everyone is in a box defined by the viewer's world view. You can't really know what's going on with someone else, in their heads, in their context, so give them some grace. Instead, this person's "friends" are "hypocrites" who were "lured" into their choices. It's very condescending. I am suggesting the poster re-examine their own views on other people in light of this.
              • foltik 2 hours ago
                You're missing the point. They're just lamenting the contrast between what their friends say (fuck tech, no kings) and what they spend their workweek in service of.

                It's not complicated: if these friends would take a non-society-destroying job at equal pay (who wouldn't?) then their values aren't driving the decision, money is. Fine, that's a choice adults get to make. But then own it and actually justify it on its merits, don't just retreat to "who are you to judge."

                • senordevnyc 1 hour ago
                  Not everyone sees AI as "society-destroying".
    • boringg 1 hour ago
      Why is it that this line items comes up EVERY TIME an article comes out in a knee jerk reaction - its so incredibly absolute:

      "Any AI researcher who continues to work here is morally compromised."

      It feels like a constant campaign and the posters seem so incredibly self righteous and unthoughtful.

      • crumpled 1 hour ago
        Probably because the articles are talking about how the AI will be used in immoral ways, and that the people who know that and continue doing the work must be morally compromised.

        I know that there might be $several ways those highly-paid engineers might still rationalize their work. Some of them might have ideological reasons to treat entire classes of people as unworthy of life. Within the model of their ideologies, the most evil things might be perfectly moral.

        I wonder what reasons you have to disagree with people's moral stance against using AI as a weapon.

        • boringg 6 minutes ago
          In absoluteness you lose your credibility except when rallying people to arms.
    • robrenaud 1 hour ago
      Is every American tax payer morally compromised?
      • eks391 59 minutes ago
        Yes ;)

        I agree with the intent of your rhetorical question, so I'm jesting with you. I'm justifying my "yes" with the hopefully humorous distraction that every person, including American taxpayers, has at some point made a nonsustainable/selfish (my definition of immoral) decision.

    • thisisauserid 3 hours ago
      I agree that it is immoral to obey some laws. Which ones are you saying are immoral here?
      • ddtaylor 1 hour ago
        An AI researcher can work anywhere they want, can't they? At the minimum they could work in a different field entirely. It seems like a false dichotomy to frame the question around laws.
        • thisisauserid 34 minutes ago
          Got it. It's immoral because you said so.
    • ReptileMan 1 hour ago
      Morality is relative and malleable. And usually people are quite good at claiming that whatever suits my agenda is moral.
    • 2OEH8eoCRo0 3 hours ago
      Is it any less moral than surveilling your neighbors and/or turning your neighbors against each other with social media?
    • mvelbaum 1 hour ago
      Any AI researcher who refuses to support his own country in a technological arms race is morally bankrupt, foolishly naive and does not deserve to enjoy the the way of life created for him by those who sacrificed their lives.
    • site-packages1 3 hours ago
      > Any AI researcher who continues to work here is morally compromised.

      Arguably it's exactly the opposite. In the same way we ask billionaires to pay their taxes because the regulatory regime is what allowed them the structure to make their billions in the first place, the national security of the country the AI researchers are in is what allows them to make a vast salary to work on interesting, leading edge capabilities like AI. They should feel obligated to help the military.

  • sailfast 3 hours ago
    This all works if you assume that any action the government takes must be “lawful”. The assumption here is that the Pentagon is obeying the law and any unlawful use would go through normal reporting / violation channels - same as any illegal order or violation or whistleblower report.

    The Pentagon does not want Google or anyone else deciding what they can and cannot use their AI for. They’re saying we won’t break the law, and that should be enough for you - pinky swear!

    And that seems to be enough for Google. Though I might request some auditing capability that is agentic to verify rather than take them at their word.

    Next step: is Google FEDRAMP’d yet for this and for classified enclaves? Or do they also go through Palantir’s AI vehicle?

    • gwbas1c 1 hour ago
      I look at this as a case of "pick your battles."

      In war, the civilians can't audit every move of the military. (It's impractical, both for reacting timely, and for keeping secrets from the enemy.)

      If the military doesn't work with Google, they will work with someone else who might not put the same amount of pressure on the military about the practical limits on AI. Or, even worse, our enemy might use a significantly better AI that we do.

      My hope is that "war" shifts to AI vs AI, machine vs machine. Calling people who work on AI for wartime purposes immoral is fundamentally immoral when AI in war replaces the need for human casulties.

      • mitthrowaway2 1 hour ago
        As a private contractor, you can sign a contract to deliver pizza or bandages to US soldiers, but also put into the contract that you won't deliver lethal weapons, if that's your own ethical stance. You don't need to audit every move of the military, just the stuff you're doing at their request.

        And sure, maybe that just means the military decides to take their business elsewhere. But if you have confidence that your service is the best, then you sell based on that.

        • eks391 49 minutes ago
          I think you and your parent have great arguments. Your pizza deliverer chose his battle, which was to only deliver pizza, not materiel, and is commendable. Your parent seems to want to delegate death from humans to AI, which seems to me like a simplification that won't turn out exactly like that, but the premise of deciding whether that is a battle to pick is valid. If you want to start blurring the lines between the analogy and literality, if you choose to pick every battle to fight, there's not enough human bandwidth to do it all, and delegation to AI could be helpful. That last sentence is more loose, so I won't defend it, but I couldn't help not making a tie between picking your battles and literal battles. Perhaps a form of dark humor there.
  • exabrial 23 minutes ago
    This whole thing is sorta blown out of context; but it does make explosive journalism, sell a bunch of ad revenue, and give Anthropic a lot of publicity (whom I think is just amoral here).

    The bottom line is in the past the US government has acquired weapons/tech with deals like "it will never be used for X purpose". However, as far as my research has shown, it has never accepted deal where said weapons or tech has self-policing features. For instance, a bomb that would refused to explode over US soil or something like that.

    And it makes sense why they would refuse such deals, as it would be a security risk, or a system that could be exploited against them by an enemy.

    Of course that does not make great headlines. And given the current administration and how news headlines are written these days, it makes sense this is the way this whole thing went down.

    • neuronexmachina 3 minutes ago
      > The bottom line is in the past the US government has acquired weapons/tech with deals like "it will never be used for X purpose". However, as far as my research has shown, it has never accepted deal where said weapons or tech has self-policing features.

      Some examples of past US govt use of tech with self-policing features:

      * DJI drones have historically had geofencing around restricted areas (e.g. airports, DC). Back when the US govt used DJI drones, govt users had to get unlock licenses from DJI to be able to operate in those areas: https://support.dji.com/help/content?customId=en-us034000067...

      * cloud computing features like Assured Workloads place firm guardrails on e.g. what regions services can be spun up in: https://cloud.google.com/security/products/assured-workloads

      * for ITAR compliance, software sold to the government will often have IP-based geofencing and lock down if it's run outside an authorized area

      * I'm pretty sure the US govt uses software that has licensing enforcement

      * This is sort of the opposite, but military technology exported by the US to other countries quite frequently has self-policing built in, e.g. geo-blocking of missiles and aircraft

  • ceejayoz 3 hours ago
    Who defines "lawful" if Google and the Pentagon disagree?

    > The classified deal apparently doesn’t allow Google to veto how the government will use its AI models.

    Seems concerning?

    • CobrastanJorji 3 hours ago
      That's presumably the trick, and it's not a subtle one; it's why the article puts it on quotes in the headline. Google gets to claim that it stood up for principles because it boldly insisted that the government obey the law, and the government will claim that whatever it decides to do is lawful. It's the same as what OpenAI did except not handled buffoonishly.
    • f33d5173 3 hours ago
      Lawful is presumably defined in the usual, common sense, ie we can do whatever the f we want until a court physically forces us not to.
      • dmd 3 hours ago
        And since the court has no way to physically force anything - that's the executive branch's function, (it's right there in the name) - lawful has no meaning whatsoever if it's the executive branch that wants to break the law.
        • muvlon 2 hours ago
          And the Pentagon has historically gotten away with damn near everything even in the judicial branch by appealing to national security.
    • impulser_ 3 hours ago
      No it doesn't at all. Private corporations shouldn't be telling the government what it can and can't do. That's the job of the people. You want private corporation overriding your vote?
      • ceejayoz 2 hours ago
        > Private corporations shouldn't be telling the government what it can and can't do.

        So Google can't tell the government it needs a warrant to perform a search? Google can't sue over something the government did?

        It's Google's product they want to buy.

        • serial_dev 2 hours ago
          Just follow the orders, man!
          • red-iron-pine 2 hours ago
            don't worry about the people getting sent to camps. it's lawful so it's okay.

            now follow orders.

        • impulser_ 2 hours ago
          I'm talking about lawful, like it written in the terms.
          • ceejayoz 2 hours ago
            But Google isn't, apparently, permitted to object "that's not lawful".

            And again, it's Google's product. Why can't they set conditions? If I pay Google to host my email, I'm still subject to their policies.

      • xp84 2 hours ago
        Agree. It seems on the surface convenient right now when people think the company (or rank and file employees?) are on their political “team” but they’d get less comfortable when oil companies or other “bad” companies dictate terms to the government. “We’ll provide fuel for the military if and only if you overturn the leader of $COUNTRY”

        (Yes, I recognize that past military entanglements do read as favors for Big Oil, but that’s more because lobbyists directly purchased the corrupt and useless Congress)

        • noelsusman 21 minutes ago
          In that scenario the President would invoke the Defense Production Act to compel the oil company to supply the oil. They threatened to use that power against Anthropic, though it's unclear how it applies to something like AI. "Claude without guardrails" is not a product Anthropic offers, so they would fight it on grounds similar to how Apple fought against being forced to crack an iPhone.

          The main issue here is that Congress is asleep at the wheel and has refused to implement any sort of guardrails around how the government is and is not allowed to use AI.

        • ceejayoz 1 hour ago
          > “We’ll provide fuel for the military if and only if you overturn the leader of $COUNTRY”

          A mechanism to address this exists, though.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Production_Act_of_1950

      • yibg 2 hours ago
        Of course it can. Terms of service and contractual obligation (should) apply to governments as well. Google is perfectly capable of outlining what's acceptable use and what's not, and the government is free to accept or reject and not use the product. Google is choosing not to set the boundaries.
    • tdb7893 3 hours ago
      Especially concerning with the how creative the executive branch can be when it comes to what laws mean. With little oversight, it seems guaranteed that it will be used for unlawful activities (despite whatever tortured argument some lawyer will have put into a memo somewhere).
      • xp84 2 hours ago
        Yeah, they’re really bad! Seems like it might be time to try convincing people to vote for someone else! Democrats haven’t tried that play since 2012, preferring the “scorn and insult anyone outside your base” strategy that’s worked so well since.
    • kingleopold 2 hours ago
      "who watches watchmen"

      question as old as time itself

    • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
      Google should never be determining what is lawful or not.
    • belzebub 3 hours ago
      There's big air quotes energy in their statement
    • ethagnawl 3 hours ago
      The classified aspect is probably the most concerning. How can I write my representative (and expect a form letter response six weeks later) if I don't know what I'm objecting to or even if I should be objecting?
      • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
        Why would you write a letter if you don't know what you're objecting to or even if you should be objecting?
        • ceejayoz 3 hours ago
          Can't I object to not knowing?
          • cooper_ganglia 3 hours ago
            No, that's what classified means.
            • ceejayoz 2 hours ago
              Surely I can complain about overclassification of things that should not be classified?
              • xp84 2 hours ago
                Absolutely. We will file your complaint in the appropriate location.

                The location is classified.

                Ok all jokes aside, if you suspect that there’s wrongdoing in the classified sphere, and it really matters to you, well, you should get involved in politics. We don’t just let everyone everywhere know everything, because we think it would be risky if Putin or the Chinese Communist Party also knew all those things. So we limit it to people who have taken oaths and are accountable and need to know (the military), the civilians who need to know (security clearance holders), and those who hold a high office with the public’s trust (high-ranking politicians). You can be a Senator. You just need a lot of people to trust you enough to vote for you. Or, and this is a bit easier, support politicians you do trust to vet classified things to be elected to high office, and ask them to look into it and give you their word that things are being done properly.

        • ethagnawl 2 hours ago
          That's kind of my point? I'm concerned by what has been made available but can't form a complete opinion and decide if I need to take action without knowing the full extent of the agreement.
          • cooper_ganglia 1 hour ago
            Nor should you be burdened with that.

            This is why we elect competent (hopefully) leaders to worry about these things for us. Mob rule democracy about every national secret would mean they’re not secrets for very long!

    • dismalaf 1 hour ago
      By definition "the law" is the set of laws that the government passes. So it's a roundabout way of saying the government can pretty much do what they want.

      Also, this is probably the only acceptable arrangement when it comes to industry-government contracts. The government will always have more information than civilians.

    • jonathanstrange 2 hours ago
      One thing is sure, they don't have international law in mind...
    • ApolloFortyNine 3 hours ago
      This has to be one of the strangest "debates" in history.

      Congress and the courts obviously.

      If you think there's a hole in the law tell your congressman, don't, for some reason, try and put Google or any Ai company above the government.

      • ceejayoz 3 hours ago
        > Congress and the courts obviously.

        The first is fully neutered. The second is far too slow.

        "Nothing unlawful" needing to be in the contract is inherently concerning, as it's typically the default, assumed state of such a thing.

        • deepsun 3 hours ago
          "follow the law" in contracts IMO is there to be able to claim a "breach of contract" by one party.
      • calgoo 3 hours ago
        Please! That ship sailed a long time ago. Sure tell your congressman, who is most likely bribed (lobbying is bribing, lets use the real words) by the same companies to accept the deal. The courts can try, but who is going to enforce it when the people above says that its fine.
    • shevy-java 3 hours ago
      It kind of reminds me of a mix of Skynet in Terminator and Minority Report. But nowhere near as interesting. More annoying than anything else.

      I am kind of mad at James Cameron here. Skynet was evil but interesting. Reallife controlled by Google is evil but not interesting - it is flat out annoying.

  • hgoel 3 hours ago
    How well does this hold up in terms of legal scrutiny when previous actions indicate that the Pentagon would retaliate against Google if they didn't accept this "lawful use only" farce?

    Could Google back out of this agreement later by arguing that they were coerced?

    Not trying to suggest that Google would be opposed to doing evil, but curious about how solid this agreement would be in practice.

  • john_strinlai 3 hours ago
    there is 0 reason that the definitions of 'lawful' for the purposes of these agreements should be classified.
    • svachalek 3 hours ago
      There's a reason, you just won't like it.
  • manicennui 24 minutes ago
    This administration has already proven that they don't care about the law and see anything they do as lawful.
  • pkilgore 1 hour ago
    No remedies, no right.

    What are the consequences of breach? Otherwise, Americans only use for this is to wipe their ass, and only if they can find a paper version.

  • jldugger 2 hours ago
    "When the president does it, that means it is not illegal" -- a former president
    • mvelbaum 1 hour ago
      -
      • jldugger 1 hour ago
        I'm not sure what point you're making, or whether it actually contradicts my own.
  • themafia 12 minutes ago
    How about: The pentagon can have "AI" once it completes a single successful audit.
  • ripvanwinkle 2 hours ago
    One observation.

    Having your work being used by the govt in ways you disagree with feels similar to having your taxes used in ways you disagree.

    When you pay taxes you have no say in the bombs acquired with that and where they are dropped. The latter though doesn't seem to provoke the same push back

    • dmit 2 hours ago
      > When you pay taxes you have no say in the bombs acquired with that and where they are dropped.

      Vote in elections, local and general.

    • jMyles 1 hour ago
      > When you pay taxes you have no say in the bombs acquired with that and where they are dropped. The latter though doesn't seem to provoke the same push back

      Indeed - paying "taxes" to a murderous entity is a horrible affront to morality and humanity. We do it because we're terrified; we are not perfect moral creatures. But we still know it's wrong.

    • Barrin92 2 hours ago
      you answered your own implicit question. You have a choice who you sell your work to, you don't have a choice what your taxes do. Seems pretty straight forward why the former elicits more push back. The government forces you to pay taxes it doesn't force you to build them tools of surveillance or weapons.
      • ripvanwinkle 2 hours ago
        IF the feds are a sufficiently large market your viability as a business might depend on keeping them happy.

        btw i am not making a judgement call on the ai usage issue itself, just saying that this and taxes are more equivalent than it might seem

        • Barrin92 2 hours ago
          >IF the feds are a sufficiently large market your viability as a business

          sure if you're Lockheed you might be screwed, but that's not the case for Google. Military contracts, or even government contracts as a whole are a tiny fraction of the King Kong Sized gorilla that is Google.

          The fact that Anthropic puts up a fight but OpenAI/Microsoft and Google don't I find hard to characterize as anything other than pathetic. These guys could, if the wanted to, afford a lawyer or to two to push back on the administration. They do that pretty successfully with their taxes in most places btw.

  • flufluflufluffy 3 hours ago
    > We remain committed to the private and public sector consensus that AI should not be used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weaponry without appropriate human oversight.

    And starts the lying to our faces. The public and private (from your own employees!) consensus is that it should not be used for those things at all, regardless of “human oversight.”

    • calgoo 3 hours ago
      I hate this part: `domestic mass surveillance`

      So the rest of the world is fine to spy on, its the domestic part they don't agree with. So go on, destroy lives all around the world, helping the powers at be build the fascist state. Its fine to use Gemini to tell what building to blow up; its fine for Gemini to wrongly identify people and cause hundreds or thousands of deaths based on the telling the military who to attack.

  • kbelder 1 hour ago
    That's how I'd like Google to behave in regards to dealing with me.
  • ethin 2 hours ago
    The fundamental problem with these "agreements" is that they are utterly nonsensical as written. Google has one idea of "lawful" and what it means; the Pentagon most definitely has a vastly different interpretation meaning "whatever we want". These companies make these agreements because they do not understand (either deliberately or just by the factor of them not understanding the intelligence sector) that when the intelligence community says "we will only use this for lawful purposes," what they are really telling you is something very, very different. With entities like the Pentagon your agreements should probably both define what "lawful" really means and should provide as few ambiguities as you can manage. Ideally you'd provide zero ambiguities but I'm not sure that's achievable in practice.
  • franciscator 1 hour ago
    Do not get distracted, that technology is used to kill people.
  • OtomotO 1 hour ago
    Lawful means nothing but "according to law", which is a meaningless statement...

    Remember that even the third Reich had laws!

  • Havoc 2 hours ago
    And in love and war all is fair...

    Reality is this ship sailed once the US/Palantir rolled out AI target selection

  • ctoth 3 hours ago
    Huh. I never realized the T-800 runs on Android. Makes sense, I guess.
  • chabes 2 hours ago
    Snakes. All of them
  • Imnimo 3 hours ago
    Unsurprising from Google, but still bad. If Google has no right to object to a particular use, this is equivalent in practice to "any use, lawful or not".
  • anygivnthursday 3 hours ago
    Is Iran already a vibe war or those are just coming?
  • mullingitover 3 hours ago
    Reminder that this administration has some absolute howler theories about what constitutes lawful behavior[1].

    [1] https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/20/us/politics/tom-homan-fbi...

  • HNisCIS 2 hours ago
    Refusing to participate WORKS.

    I've had the unfortunate experience of working at a startup that started courting some autonomous weapons companies and HOLY SHIT were they the bottom of the barrel. Levels of incompetence you wouldn't believe, just good ol' boys who wanted to play with energetics. Then the company I was working for also hemorrhaged all their top engineers because they found the work unsettling.

    The takeaway is that your refusal to assist these shitheads does have an impact, they have to pay more for talent and they have a much harder time courting good talent.

  • cdrnsf 3 hours ago
    Lawful is meaningless in the context of the Trump administration. Should Google waver (which they won't), they'll be declared a supply chain risk or otherwise bullied into submission.
    • Ritewut 3 hours ago
      Google holds immense power in their position. Trump can make their life very difficult but Google can make life for Trump very difficult as well. They have no need to kneel, they are choosing to.
      • threepts 2 hours ago
        Google simply cannot justify this power struggle, it can doesn't mean it will. It got to the top by kissing the ring and that's how they stay at the top.
        • Ritewut 1 hour ago
          I know. I'm noting that Google could fight this. They just won't.
          • threepts 1 hour ago
            I still disagree with your point Google having enough power to supersede the democratic process. If they have "good will" and fight back, someone else will take their place.
            • Ritewut 35 minutes ago
              The idea that if I don't do it, then someone else will doesn't excuse you from making unethical decisions.
      • f33d5173 3 hours ago
        what immense power?
        • Ritewut 2 hours ago
          You don't think Google having control over the most used email, most used browser, most used search engine, most used video website, and most used phone OS gives them immense power?
  • aaroninsf 42 minutes ago
    I'm not going to even bother trying it, but I assume that the top Google autocomplete for "lawful" is "evil"
  • threepts 2 hours ago
    and the pentagon determines the law?
  • CrzyLngPwd 1 hour ago
    Meh.

    Lawful didn't stop Project MKUltra, or attacking countless countries, or overthrowing countless governments, or murdering countless people, or kidnapping people and torturing them, or...

    The USA can do anything it wants, to anyone, any time.

  • qznc 3 hours ago
    And that is news-worthy because unlawful use is normal?
  • joering2 2 hours ago
    The sign contract for any lawful use ?? Can you sign a contract with US government for some unlawful use??
  • jcgrillo 3 hours ago
    It's pretty funny how these guys are all becoming some kind of internet version of, like, Halliburton. It seems pretty desperate. B2C and B2B applications didn't pan out I guess?
    • zarzavat 3 hours ago
      It's one of two identified uses for AI that is profitable today: writing code and blowing up schools. They are desperate to show the market that the technology is anything more than a money pit.
    • ctoth 2 hours ago
      The thing is we're in a new Cold War, and most of our adversaries have gotten the memo and most of us ... haven't. Yes, becoming a new Halliburton is a rational move if you see the board right now. I don't like it even one tiny bit.
      • a456463 1 hour ago
        I don't like it even tiny bit. But other people are doing it, so I mma go full steam ahead.

        This is exactly what got us here.

      • plytow 2 hours ago
        [dead]
  • morkalork 4 hours ago
    Will lawful use be determined in secret courts a la NSA and FISA?
    • Sanzig 3 hours ago
      Doubtful it will even get that far, the DoJ will simply draft an appropriate fig leaf memo with a predetermined conclusion and the government will simply plow on ahead.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torture_Memos

      • stephbook 3 hours ago
        They simply say they have that memo. Who knows whether they even drafted it for real? And if anyone starts looking, Gemini can quickly draft one itself. Nice!
    • vrganj 3 hours ago
      Don't be silly.

      "When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal." - Richard Nixon

      • kentm 2 hours ago
        Also the Supreme Court, half of Congress, and apparently something like 40% of the American populace.
  • grafmax 2 hours ago
    There's a lot of money in genocide.
  • psychoslave 3 hours ago
    Do no evil. Well don't make anything illegal at least. I mean, let's not do what is different from whatever we wish at the moment.
    • threepts 2 hours ago
      Evil to them is not making money. It's pretty subjective.
  • Brian_K_White 3 hours ago
    What a handy word "lawful".
  • ChrisArchitect 3 hours ago
  • ChrisArchitect 3 hours ago
  • shevy-java 3 hours ago
    The beginning of Skynet 6.0.
  • mattdeboard 2 hours ago
    "don't be evil"
  • jMyles 1 hour ago
    These deals / arrangements / affronts / conspiracies will continue as long as there are sums of money too large to say no to.

    It's so unbelievably obvious at this point that the Pentagon, and everything like it across the globe, needs a deprecation plan. We don't need these massive states anymore for security or regularity; we can communicate around the world at the speed of light and bypass their notions of how we're supposed to relate to one another.

    Enough is enough. Spin down the nukes. Bring home the ships. Send the money back.

  • PunchTornado 39 minutes ago
    very disappointed. if I could, I would sell my google stock and buy anthropic. can't wait for anthropic to ipo. I love them.
  • SpicyLemonZest 2 hours ago
    As a big critic of the OpenAI deal, this kinda sounds like a nothingburger to me. Of course Google doesn't get a veto on operational decisions, no customer would ever agree to such a thing. The problem with OpenAI was that they took advantage of Anthropic standing their ground to wedge their way in, which was both bad on its own terms and raises serious concerns about whether they're being honest on the real terms of the deal.
  • vrganj 3 hours ago
    See also: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_and_the_Holocaust

    Capital and Big Tech have always been opportunistic enablers, not principled actors. Corporate Values have always been nothing but internal propaganda. "Don't be evil", what a farce.

  • qwerpy 3 hours ago
    [dead]