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Anthropic’s Claude climbs to top of App Store amid military tech dispute

The AI chatbot scene is seeing a reshuffle, with Anthropic’s Claude shooting from 42nd to the first spot on the US App Store’s Top Downloaded charts in just two months. It now outpaces heavyweights like OpenAI’s ChatGPT

Image: 9to5Mac

The AI chatbot scene is seeing a reshuffle, with Anthropic’s Claude shooting from 42nd to the first spot on the US App Store’s Top Downloaded charts in just two months. It now outpaces heavyweights like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini.

What’s fueling this sudden spike isn’t a new feature upgrade or innovation. Instead, Anthropic finds itself in a tense standoff with the US government, making Claude the figurative and literal talk of the digital town.

Last week, the Department of War-yes, a rebranded military department-declared Anthropic a supply-chain risk to national security. This came alongside a directive from the president to end all federal use of Anthropic’s technology. To drive the point home, the military barred contractors, suppliers, and partners from engaging commercially with Anthropic.

Anthropic fired back, explaining why it opposes military deployment of its AI. Their core arguments: current AI models aren’t yet reliable enough for fully autonomous weapons, posing unacceptable risks to warfighters and civilians. Plus, they object to the use of their technology for mass domestic surveillance, which they see as a rights violation.

This clash taps into longstanding concerns about the militarization of AI and ethical boundaries in emerging technologies. While governments worldwide race to leverage AI for defense, companies like Anthropic challenge how-or if-the technology should be weaponized at all.

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The irony? The government’s attempt to cut Anthropic off appears to have backfired, boosting Claude’s visibility and user interest among the public instead. Even without new bells and whistles, this controversy turned Claude into a cause célèbre for those wary of government intervention in tech development.

Meanwhile, OpenAI and Google, whose AI apps are second and third on the charts, have so far avoided such public clashes. Their more cautious or aligned stances with government agencies may be shielding them from similar backlash-yet they also might be sacrificing the spotlight that controversy can bring.

This episode is a vivid reminder that AI’s future won’t just be shaped by engineering breakthroughs but by political and ethical battles. Companies willing to take explicit stands risk regulatory pushback but may gain market mindshare and public support in return.

If Anthropic’s influence continues to rise despite-or because of-its confrontation with the US military, we could see more startups choosing principle over quick gains, reshaping the AI sector’s incentives. For users, it also means their app choices are increasingly political acts, not just tech preferences.

Ava Chen

AI Editor

Ava covers the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, from foundational models and research labs to the real-world economics of intelligence. With a background in computational linguistics, she cuts through the hype to find out what actually works. She firmly believes that benchmarks are just marketing until reproduced in the wild.

via 9to5Mac

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