Key facts
- The Trump administration denied unlawfully retaliating against AI company Anthropic.
The Trump administration denied unlawfully retaliating against AI company Anthropic in a court filing, acknowledging that agencies moved to restrict its products after the company resisted Pentagon demands regarding military uses of its Claude chatbot. Anthropic had sued, alleging the blacklisting violated its free speech rights.
This case tests the boundaries of government power over technology companies and the extent to which AI developers can control the use of their products, particularly in sensitive military applications, while also raising questions about free speech and due process in the context of national security designations.
The Trump administration has denied unlawfully retaliating against AI company Anthropic, according to a court filing. The government acknowledged that U.S. agencies moved to restrict Anthropic's products after the company resisted Pentagon demands concerning the military applications of its Claude chatbot. Anthropic had filed a lawsuit in March, accusing President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth of blacklisting the company for protected speech and violating its free speech and due process rights.
The Department of Justice also argued in San Francisco federal court that the ban is not subject to judicial review, as Anthropic is not challenging a "final agency action." U.S. District Judge Rita Lin had previously issued a temporary block on the Pentagon's blacklisting of the AI firm.
The dispute is seen as a test case for the administration's authority over businesses and the control of AI technology usage. Anthropic also has a separate lawsuit pending in Washington, D.C., related to another Pentagon designation that could affect its eligibility for civilian government contracts. The company announced on June 1 that it has confidentially filed for an initial public offering in the U.S.