Anthropic Won in Court but the Pentagon Has More Weapons
Anthropic's preliminary injunction was a procedural win, not a precedent -- and Politico reports the Pentagon has multiple legal avenues to finish what the court paused.
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Anthropic's preliminary injunction was a procedural win, not a precedent -- and Politico reports the Pentagon has multiple legal avenues to finish what the court paused.
Artemis II is confirmed for April 1 -- four astronauts, a lunar flyby, and the first crewed journey beyond low Earth orbit since 1972, launched by a government that cannot fund DHS or end its own war.
Two hundred companies have cut nearly 60,000 workers in 88 days, averaging 681 people per day, and every earnings call blames AI.
Scientists created a carbon material that releases captured CO2 at under 60 degrees Celsius, potentially slashing the energy cost that makes carbon capture uneconomical.
The WMO's State of the Global Climate report confirms the last 11 years are the hottest on record and Earth's energy imbalance is at a 65-year high.
NASA published the full 49-hour countdown sequence for Artemis II, targeting an April 1 launch that would send humans around the Moon for the first time since 1972.
Anthropic won a preliminary injunction but faces a parallel DC Circuit case and political pressure that could still destroy the company.
OpenAI signed a Pentagon deal hours after Anthropic was blacklisted, accepting 'all lawful use' terms that Anthropic had refused over weapons safety concerns.
Earth.Org's weekly climate digest includes a new UN report on planetary warming acceleration — published during the week fossil fuels became more necessary, not less.
The four-page AI framework released March 20 called for light-touch regulation and federal preemption — ten days later, Morgan Stanley warned of a capability jump the document does not address.