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Home » Anthropic Opposes the Extreme AI Liability Bill That OpenAI Backed
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Anthropic Opposes the Extreme AI Liability Bill That OpenAI Backed

By technologistmag.com14 April 20264 Mins Read
Anthropic Opposes the Extreme AI Liability Bill That OpenAI Backed
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Anthropic has come out against a proposed Illinois law backed by OpenAI that would shield AI labs from liability if their systems are used to cause large-scale harm, like mass casualties or more than $1 billion in property damage.

The fight over the state bill, SB 3444, is drawing new battlelines between Anthropic and OpenAI over how AI technologies should be regulated. While AI policy experts say that the legislation only has a remote chance of becoming law, it has nonetheless exposed political divisions between two leading US AI labs that could become increasingly important as the rival companies ramp up their lobbying activity across the country.

Behind the scenes, Anthropic has been lobbying state Senator Bill Cunningham, SB 3444’s sponsor, and other Illinois lawmakers to either make major changes to the bill or kill it as it stands, according to people familiar with the matter. In an email to WIRED, an Anthropic spokesperson confirmed the company’s opposition to SB 3444, and said it has held promising conversations with Cunningham about using the bill as a starting point for future AI legislation.

“We are opposed to this bill. Good transparency legislation needs to ensure public safety and accountability for the companies developing this powerful technology, not provide a get-out-of-jail-free card against all liability,” Cesar Fernandez, Anthropic’s head of US state and local government relations, said in a statement. “We know that Senator Cunningham cares deeply about AI safety and we look forward to working with him on changes that would instead pair transparency with real accountability for mitigating the most serious harms frontier AI systems could cause.”

Representatives for Cunningham and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker did not respond to WIRED’s request for comment ahead of publication.

The crux of OpenAI and Anthropic’s disagreement over SB 3444 comes down to who should be liable in the event of an AI-enabled disaster—a nightmare potential scenario that US lawmakers have only recently begun to confront. If SB 3444 were passed, an AI lab would not be responsible if a bad actor used their AI model to, for example, create a bioweapon that kills hundreds of people, so long as the lab drafted its own safety framework and published it on its website.

OpenAI has argued that SB 3444 reduces the risk of serious harm from frontier AI systems while “still allowing this technology to get into the hands of the people and businesses—small and big—of Illinois,.”

The ChatGPT maker says it has worked with states like New York and California to create what is calls a “harmonized” approach to regulating AI. “In the absence of federal action, we will continue to work with states—including Illinois—to work towards a consistent safety framework,” OpenAI spokesperson Liz Bourgeois said in a statement. “We hope these state laws will inform a national framework that will help ensure the US continues to lead.”

Anthropic, on the other hand, is arguing that companies developing frontier AI models should be held at least partially responsible if their technology is used for widespread societal harm.

Some experts say the bill would dismantle existing regulations meant to deter companies from behaving badly. “Liability already exists under common law and provides a powerful incentive for AI companies to take reasonable steps to prevent foreseeable risks from their AI systems,” says Thomas Woodside, cofounder and senior policy analyst at the Secure AI Project, a nonprofit that has helped develop and advocate for AI safety laws in California and New York. “SB 3444 would take the extreme step of nearly eliminating liability for severe harms. But it’s a bad idea to weaken liability, which in most states is the most significant form of legal accountability for AI companies that’s already in place.”

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