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Report: US Firms Shift to Chinese AI After Trump Administration Curbs on Anthropic Models
A recent U.S. directive placing strict export controls on Anthropic’s advanced AI models over national security concerns unexpectedly drove American and global corporations to use Chinese open-source alternatives.
Key Takeaways
Export Controls Spark Disruption
American companies dramatically increased their use of Chinese open-source artificial intelligence models following recent U.S. government restrictions on domestic frontier AI systems, according to a report by Nikkei Asia.
The surge highlights the unintended market consequences of Washington’s aggressive regulatory interventions, which critics warn could inadvertently bolster Beijing’s position in the global technology race.
The spike in adoption followed a June 12 directive from the U.S. Department of Commerce that abruptly placed strict export controls on Anthropic’s advanced Claude Mythos 5 and Fable 5 models. Citing national security concerns over potential cybersecurity vulnerabilities and “jailbreak” risks, the federal mandate ordered the developer to deny access to non-U.S. citizens. Because Anthropic could not immediately verify user citizenship globally, it suspended availability for all international users, leaving foreign entities and multinational firms without access to the technology.
Faced with sudden disruption and looking to hedge against unpredictable policy shifts in Washington, numerous U.S. corporations and global clients turned to accessible Chinese open source models as dependable alternatives. A Bitcoin.com News report also noted that interest in decentralized alternatives surged soon after the restrictions took effect. Industry analysts noted that the regulatory barriers created a chilling effect, driving enterprise clients toward Chinese platforms that face fewer deployment restrictions outside of China.
The Commerce Department has since rescinded the ban on Anthropic’s models after the company deployed enhanced security classifiers to mitigate cybersecurity risks. U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed that a license is no longer required to distribute the Mythos or Fable models following an intensive review. Anthropic stated that global access would begin restoring July 8.
Tech Industry Pushes Back on Federal Oversight
Yet despite the policy reversal, technology experts say the episode has already altered market dynamics. Sridhar Vembu, founder of Zoho, observed on social media that the swift return of Anthropic’s models to the international market signals that Washington is beginning to take the competitive threat of Chinese open source development seriously.
“Chinese open source models posed a serious enough threat to market share,” Vembu wrote, arguing that heavy-handed U.S. restrictions risk permanently driving international customers into the arms of Chinese competitors.
The incident reflects broader friction between tech companies and federal oversight. Other industry leaders, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, have expressed concern over government-controlled access to commercial AI systems. OpenAI similarly delayed the wider rollout of its upcoming GPT-5.6 model at the request of federal officials.
While the restrictions on Anthropic lasted less than three weeks, economists and trade experts warn that the ad hoc nature of the enforcement has damaged the reputation of the United States as a reliable technology provider. Industry groups caution that if abrupt regulatory interventions become the norm, global businesses will increasingly rely on non-U.S. software architectures to guarantee operational continuity.