Close Menu
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
What's Hot

LA’s Luxury Plot Twist: Foreign Billions Flood In as Local Titans Shift Out

12/04/2026

PSG vs Liverpool: Confirmed Lineups Unleashed! Isak’s Bench Role Shakes Up Anticipation

12/04/2026

AI’s Hidden Tax: The RAM Shortage Fueling SSD Price Hikes

12/04/2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, April 12
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
Newstech24.com
Home - Economy & Business - OpenAI Draws Its Line: Surveillance Safeguards After Pentagon Pact
Economy & Business

OpenAI Draws Its Line: Surveillance Safeguards After Pentagon Pact

By Admin05/03/2026Updated:11/03/2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
OpenAI pushes to add surveillance safeguards following Pentagon deal
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

OpenAI is engaged in discussions with the US defense department to establish further protective measures. These initiatives are aimed at averting widespread monitoring of American citizens through its AI, as the company proceeds to execute the agreement that was rapidly unveiled on Friday.

The AI start-up founded by Sam Altman has already modified the language in its contracts concerning surveillance and aims to incorporate additional safeguards during the three-month period designated for the agreement’s execution.

Legal experts and staff have closely examined phrasing within the contract that prohibits “intentional”, “deliberate”, or “targeted” surveillance, according to individuals familiar with the conversations.

They have voiced apprehensions that the government could conduct oversight on Americans “incidentally” or “unintentionally” by utilizing modern AI tools, these sources added.

“What remains to be determined is the operationalization of [these contracts],” commented a person close to OpenAI.

The subsequent phase will address questions extending “beyond the precise wording of the contracts,” including where the technology will be deployed and the technical safeguards governing when AI models might decline to follow certain instructions.

“The challenge for OpenAI lies in creating a product that remains functional yet avoids engaging in unsafe actions,” this individual further elaborated.

This endeavor to introduce protections during the implementation of the Pentagon deal arises as OpenAI has consistently sought to clarify the terms of its contract and alleviate concerns, including those from its own personnel, regarding the potential misuse of the $730 billion start-up’s potent AI.

OpenAI’s strategy diverges from that of its competitor, Anthropic, which has declined to accept contract provisions due to anxieties about surveillance.

Altman has conceded that the swiftness to finalize a deal following Anthropic’s spectacular collapse of talks on Friday “appeared opportunistic and disorganized.”

Anthropic’s chief executive, Dario Amodei, criticized OpenAI’s “deceptive” communication regarding its initial contract in an internal memo to staff, a story first reported by The Information on Wednesday.

He accused Altman of “manipulating” his company by “endeavoring to undermine our stance while seemingly endorsing it,” as per the memo dispatched to staff on Friday.

Altman announced updates to the ChatGPT maker’s contract on Monday. These revisions “forbid deliberate tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of US persons or nationals, including through the acquisition or use of commercially obtained personal or identifiable data.”

Intelligence agencies, such as the National Security Agency—whose collection of extensive metadata from the phones of ordinary Americans was exposed by Edward Snowden in 2013—would also be excluded from this arrangement, he further stated.

Connie LaRossa, OpenAI’s US national security policy lead, stated on Wednesday that the terms for safeguards to protect against surveillance “are still under negotiation.”

OpenAI confirmed that its agreement with the Pentagon had been signed and that “we believe the new updates from Monday were significant. We will be collaborating closely with the department during this implementation stage.”

The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has maintained that AI companies must make their technology accessible for “all legitimate purposes.”

In discussions with the Pentagon, Amodei advocated for assurances that its AI could not be utilized for domestic mass surveillance or in lethal autonomous weaponry.

The Anthropic CEO wrote in his memo that under the current Pentagon policy, established during Joe Biden’s administration, “a human must remain involved in the deployment of a weapon. However, that policy can be unilaterally altered by Pete Hegseth, which is precisely our concern.”

Amodei also insisted on a provision prohibiting agencies from gathering extensive public datasets and employing Anthropic’s tools to analyze them, according to a source privy to the discussions. He contended that while doing so might be legal, it could amount to widespread domestic monitoring.

OpenAI has contended it could uphold the same restrictions on surveillance and autonomous weapons through technical measures, such as its own model safeguards, and by ensuring that OpenAI employees remained “involved” and collaborated with officials.

Amodei dismissed those protective measures. “The methodologies [OpenAI] is adopting mostly prove ineffective: the primary reason [OpenAI] accepted them and we did not is that they prioritized appeasing employees, while we genuinely focused on preventing abuses,” he penned.

Legal professionals suggest there is a lack of clarity and certainty in the existing surveillance law, placing AI laboratories in a challenging predicament.

“Due to the absence of a clear legal and policy framework, companies presumed that no policy, nothing, no framework existed,” remarked one former high-ranking defense official.

Civil liberties advocates have argued that the current frameworks are inadequate, as legislation trails behind technological advancements.

Mieke Eoyang, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for cyber policy and a visiting professor at Carnegie Mellon University, also noted questions regarding “whether or not, in this administration, they are acknowledging that level of already embedded protection within the system.”

Recommended

Two former US government officials indicated that the White House had not publicly committed to existing legal frameworks designed to prevent the use of AI from infringing upon civil liberties.

One former senior defense official highlighted the fact that the administration had not specified whether it had maintained or revoked the AI National Security Memorandum policy, which established guidelines to prevent AI from violating civil liberties or human rights.

Paul Nakasone, a former NSA director and ex-head of US Cyber Command, who now serves on OpenAI’s board, stated at an event on Monday: “Our fundamental characteristic as a populace [is] to always view government monitoring as detrimental.”

“We must cultivate that trust regarding the National Security Agency, our intelligence community, to be capable of undertaking these kinds of missions with the assurance that our actions adhere strictly to the letter of the law,” he concluded.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

add Deal OpenAI Pentagon pushes safeguards Surveillance
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Admin
  • Website

Related Posts

LA’s Luxury Plot Twist: Foreign Billions Flood In as Local Titans Shift Out

12/04/2026

Mike Davis: The Trump-Era FTC Game Changer You Need to Know

12/04/2026

Chaos at Chick-fil-A: Union, NJ Shooting Incident Unfolds

12/04/2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Economy & Business

LA’s Luxury Plot Twist: Foreign Billions Flood In as Local Titans Shift Out

By Admin12/04/20260

Key Takeaways Fiscal Policy Drives Wealth Migration: California’s proposed wealth tax is directly accelerating an…

Like this:

Like Loading...

PSG vs Liverpool: Confirmed Lineups Unleashed! Isak’s Bench Role Shakes Up Anticipation

12/04/2026

AI’s Hidden Tax: The RAM Shortage Fueling SSD Price Hikes

12/04/2026

Oxford Firm Secures Game-Changing Military Pilot Training Deal

12/04/2026

Falcons RT Kaleb McGary Calls It a Career, Retiring at Just 31

12/04/2026

My Long-Awaited iPhone Air: Unboxing The Future of Thin Design

12/04/2026

Dodgers Legend Davey Lopes: The Unforgettable 4-Time All-Star Passes at 80

12/04/2026

Mike Davis: The Trump-Era FTC Game Changer You Need to Know

12/04/2026

The Scottie Scheffler Paradox: Why His Calm Presence Dominates Augusta

12/04/2026

Is Your Kindle Affected? Amazon Sunsets Support for Older E-Readers

12/04/2026
Advertisement
About Us
About Us

NewsTech24 is your premier digital news destination, delivering breaking updates, in-depth analysis, and real-time coverage across sports, technology, global economics, and the Arab world. We pride ourselves on accuracy, speed, and unbiased reporting, keeping you informed 24/7. Whether it’s the latest tech innovations, market trends, sports highlights, or key developments in the Middle East—NewsTech24 bridges the gap between news and insight.

Company
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms Of Use
Latest Posts

LA’s Luxury Plot Twist: Foreign Billions Flood In as Local Titans Shift Out

12/04/2026

PSG vs Liverpool: Confirmed Lineups Unleashed! Isak’s Bench Role Shakes Up Anticipation

12/04/2026

AI’s Hidden Tax: The RAM Shortage Fueling SSD Price Hikes

12/04/2026

Oxford Firm Secures Game-Changing Military Pilot Training Deal

12/04/2026

Falcons RT Kaleb McGary Calls It a Career, Retiring at Just 31

12/04/2026
Newstech24.com
Facebook X (Twitter) Tumblr Threads RSS
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
© 2026

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Powered by
►
Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
None
►
Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
None
►
Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
None
►
Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
None
►
Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
None
Powered by
%d