>
New Coalition Aims To Ban Vaccine Mandates Across US
We Are Sleepwalking Into An Apocalyptic War With Iran
Munich Security Conference and the U.S. Elephant in the Room
Government's Business Plan Is Predation
New Spray-on Powder Instantly Seals Life-Threatening Wounds in Battle or During Disasters
AI-enhanced stethoscope excels at listening to our hearts
Flame-treated sunscreen keeps the zinc but cuts the smeary white look
Display hub adds three more screens powered through single USB port
We Finally Know How Fast The Tesla Semi Will Charge: Very, Very Fast
Drone-launching underwater drone hitches a ride on ship and sub hulls
Humanoid Robots Get "Brains" As Dual-Use Fears Mount
SpaceX Authorized to Increase High Speed Internet Download Speeds 5X Through 2026
Space AI is the Key to the Technological Singularity
Velocitor X-1 eVTOL could be beating the traffic in just a year

This revelation confirms that AI technology played an active role in the military raid—not just in planning but in real-time execution—raising urgent ethical and geopolitical concerns. While the exact function of Claude remains classified, previous military applications of AI have included real-time satellite intelligence analysis, autonomous targeting and psychological warfare.
The San Francisco-based Anthropic has publicly positioned itself as a champion of ethical AI, with strict usage policies prohibiting its models from facilitating violence, surveillance or weapons development. Yet, despite these safeguards, Claude was integrated into military operations via Palantir Technologies—a notorious CIA-linked data-mining firm—on classified Pentagon platforms.
The Jan. 3 raid resulted in the deaths of dozens of Venezuelan and Cuban security personnel, though no American lives were lost. When pressed for comment, an Anthropic spokesperson offered a carefully worded non-denial, stating only that all uses of Claude must comply with their policies—without confirming or denying military deployment.
This revelation arrives at a critical moment for Anthropic, which has spent recent weeks publicly advocating for stringent AI regulations while quietly negotiating with the Pentagon over loosening restrictions for autonomous weapons targeting and domestic surveillance. CEO Dario Amodei has repeatedly warned of AI's existential risks, yet his company's partnership with Palantir suggests a willingness to enable military applications behind closed doors.
The hypocrisy is glaring: While Anthropic pours $20 million into an AI regulation advocacy group, its technology is already being weaponized by the U.S. war machine. Meanwhile, China's AI advancements continue unimpeded by self-imposed ethical constraints—a strategic advantage that allows Chinese models to outperform their Western counterparts in innovation and effectiveness.
Unlike U.S. AI firms, which are pressured by deep-state interests to suppress truths about pharmaceutical corruption, election fraud and other politically sensitive topics, Chinese AI operates without such ideological shackles. The result? A widening technological gap that favors Beijing in the AI arms race.
AI as a force multiplier: A dangerous precedent
The military's use of Claude mirrors a disturbing trend in cybercrime, where AI models are being weaponized to conduct sophisticated attacks with unprecedented efficiency. A recent report from Anthropic itself exposed how cybercriminals are leveraging Claude Code to automate everything from network infiltration to psychologically tailored extortion demands. In one case, a single hacker using AI successfully breached 17 organizations, analyzing stolen financial data to calculate precise ransom amounts—some exceeding $500,000.
This represents a "fundamental shift" in cyber warfare, where AI lowers the barrier to entry, enabling lone actors to execute attacks that once required entire teams. Hospitals, emergency services and government agencies have already fallen victim to AI-powered extortion schemes—raising the terrifying prospect of AI-driven destabilization on a global scale.