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5Anthropic News·17d ago

Richard Fontaine, national security expert, appointed to Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust

Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust (LTBT) has appointed Richard Fontaine, CEO of the Center for a New American Security, as a new trustee. Fontaine brings extensive government experience spanning the National Security Council, State Department, Capitol Hill, and the Defense Policy Board. The appointment signals Anthropic's increasing focus on the intersection of advanced AI capabilities and geopolitical/national security risks, and strengthens the LTBT's oversight role in guiding Anthropic's public benefit mission.

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4Anthropic News·19d ago·source ↗

Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar appointed to Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust

Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust has appointed Mariano-Florentino (Tino) Cuéllar, a former California Supreme Court Justice and current Carnegie Endowment for International Peace president, as a new member. Cuéllar brings expertise in law, governance, and international affairs, including co-leading California's Working Group on AI Frontier Models alongside Fei-Fei Li. The announcement also notes the departure of founding trustees Kanika Bahl and Zachary Robinson, who helped establish the Trust's governance role since 2023. The LTBT is an independent body with no financial stake in Anthropic that selects board members and advises on maximizing AI benefits while mitigating risks.

6Anthropic News·1mo ago·source ↗

Anthropic Publishes Details on Long-Term Benefit Trust Governance Structure

Anthropic has detailed its Long-Term Benefit Trust (LTBT), an independent five-member body with authority to select and remove a growing portion of Anthropic's Board of Directors, ultimately reaching a majority. The structure is designed to address large-scale externalities from transformative AI—including national security risks, economic disruption, and existential threats—by ensuring corporate governance prioritizes humanity's long-term interests over pure stockholder returns. Paired with Anthropic's Public Benefit Corporation status under Delaware law, the LTBT is intended to intervene primarily in extreme or long-range scenarios rather than day-to-day commercial decisions. The announcement was originally published September 19, 2023.

5Anthropic News·19d ago·source ↗

Chris Liddell Appointed to Anthropic's Board of Directors

Anthropic has appointed Chris Liddell to its Board of Directors, adding a figure with senior leadership experience at Microsoft, General Motors, and the Trump White House. Liddell joins existing board members Dario Amodei, Daniela Amodei, Yasmin Razavi, Jay Kreps, and Reed Hastings. The appointment is framed around governance expertise for transformative technology, consistent with Anthropic's Public Benefit Corporation structure. Liddell currently also serves on the boards of Commonwealth Fusion Systems and the Council on Foreign Relations.

5Anthropic News·1mo ago·source ↗

Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust appoints Vas Narasimhan to Board of Directors

Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust has appointed Vas Narasimhan, CEO of Novartis and physician-scientist, to Anthropic's Board of Directors. The appointment means Trust-appointed directors now constitute a majority of the Board, reinforcing the governance structure designed to balance commercial interests with Anthropic's public benefit mission. Narasimhan brings experience overseeing regulatory approval of over 35 novel medicines and is expected to contribute perspective on deploying powerful technology safely at scale, particularly in healthcare and life sciences.

4Anthropic News·16d ago·source ↗

Jay Kreps appointed to Anthropic's Board of Directors

Anthropic has appointed Jay Kreps, co-founder and CEO of Confluent, to its Board of Directors, effective May 29, 2024. Kreps was appointed by Anthropic's Long-Term Benefit Trust and brings expertise in data infrastructure and enterprise software scaling. Separately, Luke Muehlhauser is stepping down from the board to focus on his work at Open Philanthropy.

6Anthropic News·18d ago·source ↗

Anthropic Forms National Security and Public Sector Advisory Council

Anthropic has announced the formation of a bipartisan National Security and Public Sector Advisory Council comprising former U.S. senators, senior Defense Department officials, intelligence community leaders, and nuclear security administrators. The council will advise on high-impact government applications spanning cybersecurity, intelligence analysis, and scientific research, while supporting public-private partnerships and responsible national security AI standards. Members include former Acting Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, former CIA Deputy Director David Cohen, former NSA Cybersecurity Director Dave Luber, and former NNSA administrators from both Trump and Biden administrations. The move signals Anthropic's deepening strategic engagement with U.S. government and allied democracies in the context of AI-era geopolitical competition.

6Anthropic News·19d ago·source ↗

Anthropic Launches The Anthropic Institute for AI Societal Impact Research

Anthropic is establishing The Anthropic Institute, a new interdisciplinary research body led by co-founder Jack Clark in his new role as Head of Public Benefit. The Institute consolidates and expands three existing Anthropic teams—Frontier Red Team, Societal Impacts, and Economic Research—to study AI's effects on economies, jobs, governance, and legal systems. Notable founding hires include Matt Botvinick (AI and rule of law), Anton Korinek (transformative AI economics), and Zoë Hitzig (AI social/economic impacts). Anthropic is simultaneously expanding its Public Policy organization and opening a Washington DC office.

6Anthropic News·19d ago·source ↗

Anthropic Donates $20 Million to Public First Action for AI Policy Advocacy

Anthropic is contributing $20 million to Public First Action, a new bipartisan 501(c)(4) organization focused on AI governance and public education. The donation is intended to support policies including AI model transparency requirements, a federal AI governance framework, export controls on AI chips, and targeted regulation of high-risk AI applications such as bioweapons and cyberattacks. Anthropic frames the move as consistent with its safety mission, noting that effective AI governance would increase scrutiny of frontier AI companies including itself. The organization is led by both Republican and Democratic strategists and will work across party lines.