MY KOLKATA EDUGRAPH
ADVERTISEMENT
regular-article-logo Saturday, 07 March 2026

US government drafts strict AI contract rules amid Pentagon-Anthropic dispute: Report

A draft of the guidelines says AI groups seeking business with the government must grant the US an irrevocable license to use their systems for all legal purposes

Our Web Desk, Reuters Published 07.03.26, 09:39 AM
US AI contract rules

CEO of Anthropic Dario Amodei File picture

The Trump administration has drawn up strict rules for civilian artificial-intelligence contracts that would require companies to allow “any lawful” use of their models, the Financial Times reported on Friday, as a dispute escalates between the Pentagon and AI firm Anthropic.

A draft of the guidelines says AI groups seeking business with the government must grant the US an irrevocable license to use their systems for all legal purposes.

ADVERTISEMENT

This comes just a day after the Pentagon designated Anthropic a "supply-chain risk" on Thursday. The designation bars government contractors from using the AI firm's technology in work for the US military.

The stand-off between the Trump administration and Anthropic comes amid a months-long dispute over the company's insistence on safeguards that the Defense Department says went too far.

The guidance from the General Services Administration would apply to civilian contracts and is part of a broader government-wide effort to strengthen AI services procurement, the newspaper reported, adding that it mirrors measures the Pentagon is considering for military contracts.

"It would be irresponsible to the American people and dangerous to our nation for GSA to maintain a business relationship with Anthropic," Josh Gruenbaum, commissioner of the Federal Acquisition Service, a GSA subsidiary that helps procure software for the federal government, told Reuters by email.

"As directed by the President, GSA has terminated Anthropic’s OneGov deal - ending their availability to the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches through GSA’s pre-negotiated contracts," Gruenbaum said.

The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Reuters.

The GSA draft mandates that contractors "must not intentionally encode partisan or ideological judgments into the AI systems’ data outputs," the FT reported.

It requires companies to disclose whether their models have been "modified or configured to comply with any non-U.S. federal government or commercial compliance or regulatory framework," the newspaper said.

Follow us on:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT